comedy

Brain to Books Blog Tour: Kevin Zdrill

Brain to Books Blog Tour: Kevin Zdrill

We’ve got another wonderful Proof Positive author participating in the Brain to Books Blog Tour this month. Kevin Zdrill, a prolific, multi-genre author shares his latest work, The Ukranian in Me, plus a little bit about his writing strategies.

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Fast Facts
Author: Kevin Zdrill
Genre: Contemporary adult comedy romance
Books: The Ukrainian In Me
Official Site

Bio

Kevin Zdrill discovered the power of story telling at the age of 11. After dusting off a manual typewriter from the closet of his parent’s home, he began creating short, comedic skits for his friends to read. Their laughter at these unadorned stories sparked an enthusiasm to continue exploring human behavior and relationships.

“I’m always looking for the characters within my books to have natural flaws. I find it speaks to their desperate nature in humorous and earnest settings. It’s important for the reader to relate and bond to the characters and to care about the chain of events that occur.”

Kevin Zdrill is a Manitoba-based author employed in the field of mental health and crisis intervention. His comedy fiction series, including No Kiss Good-Night and Boom Chicka Wah Wah, captures the heartfelt misadventures of dating and relationships. His third book, Crazy, Mixed-Up World, explores the ramifications of the collision of life, love, and betrayal.

Blurb

When thirty-year-old independent web designer Larissa Androshchuk separates from her husband after nine months, one day, and a morning, she blames it on the Ukrainian curse that has dogged her family for generations; she believes that all

Androshchuks are destined to fail at whatever they do.

Larissa moves back to her former room in the basement of her parents’ Manitoba house, where she starts posting a blog venting her fears and frustrations. In spite of her uncertain and possibly ill-fated future, she is determined to break free of the

family shackles. Larissa embarks on a complete makeover as a prelude to a triumphant return to the dating scene, turning for help to her best friend, Bernadette; her Internet-savvy cousin Garth; her middle-aged diva aunt Tina; and her ninety-one-year-old pierogi-making baba. But the men she encounters turn out to be even more damaged than her ego. Meanwhile, Larissa’s father unabashedly takes to restoring the tarp covered twenty-year old Chrysler in the backyard to ensure her stay in their house will be short-lived, making her life even more uncomfortable.

When an unexpected opportunity presents itself, Larissa sees this as her last shot to take control and leap free from her fate. But can she escape the curse long enough to turn her life around?

Excerpt

I flopped down on my bed, not caring what effect the towel was going to have on my hair. Let it become a rat’s nest, I thought. There was no one to impress anymore. Fingers wouldn’t be running through it with passion—not that I’d ever had that kind of passion from my ex, but I always fantasized it could happen at any moment.

Did I really believe that was possible? I took a deep breath and moved my gaze around the room slowly, taking in wallpaper so familiar I knew where every mismatched seam was. Besides the obvious conclusion—this room needed a serious makeover—my observations hammered home the fact that this was the last place in my life I needed to be for any reason. Heck, I needed a makeover more than this damn room did.

Sweet Jesus, I was thirty years old and starting from scratch. I had no job; no money; no higher education; no car, because I didn’t have a driver’s license; and now no husband.

I shivered, although I wasn’t cold anymore. I still couldn’t believe it. At thirty years old, I didn’t have the ability to live anywhere but in the basement of my parents’ home, in my former bedroom. It sucked so bad that it hurt to breathe.

The Ukrainian curse had finally caught up with me. My entire family tree suffered from it, and I was the latest victim.

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Author Chat: Kevin Zdrill

Author Chat: Kevin Zdrill

Kevin Zdrill’s latest book, The Ukrainian In Me, takes a light-hearted yet honest and heartfelt look at the insecurities, concerns, and utterly hilarious family and social life of an unemployed 30-year-old woman of Ukrainian descent, whose marriage of “nine months, a day and a morning” ended in divorce, leaving her living in her parents’ basement. But that’s just the start of things. The plot and subplots riddled with clever catch-you-by-surprise, laugh-out-loud humor all mesh together into one fun yet intelligent book.

So we asked this prolific author – just how did this book happen?

I do have Ukrainian heritage on one side of my family. As a result, I’ve experienced a unique and entertaining childhood that hasn’t stopped making me laugh to this day. I’ve grown up in a city with neighborhoods rich with Ukrainian heritages and traditions and it’s been a privilege for me to experience the wonderful culture.

I’ve come to recognize unique dynamics within a traditional Ukrainian family that got me thinking how rich a family could be as the centre of my book for the sparks to fly. Baba is truly the heartbeat and authoritative voice of reason for Ukrainians. She is the backbone, the focal point who hosts all the special event dinners, where everyone goes to get advice or gets advice whether they want it or not. She’s the feisty, less than five-foot-tall ball of fire that you fear when you mess up and collapse in her arms when in distress. And when it comes to traditions, Baba is there to pass those traditions down the generations such as crafting Easter eggs, baking and making delicious foods such as pierogies, cabbage rolls and headcheese. (By the way, those who have eaten headcheese either love it or run from it, but it’s a fascinating food with a texture and appearance that defies anything else like it!)

It’s usually very hard for a man to write from a woman’s perspective, yet you do it so brilliantly in this book. How did you get inside a divorced-and-looking woman’s head so well?

Thank you! The immediate challenge for me was the unknown – if I was successful or UKRAINIAN COVER 2015missed the mark entirely while writing from a female perspective. Essentially, the best I could do was use my own perspective and interpretation of what some of the challenges could be for a female surrounding dating, divorce, self-image and social barriers. My hopes were to identify these areas with my lead character, Larissa, and provide her with a wry, self-depreciating sense of humor, adventurous to a fault but determined to make changes in her life.

I felt writing from a female’s perspective and one who possesses a Ukrainian heritage provided me an opportunity to showcase the loyalty dilemma facing Larissa. On one hand, as a female, she is pressured to fulfill the expectations of her baba to learn customs and cooking yet is caught in a generation transitioning away from being a stay-at-home wife to gaining a career and being independent. Suddenly finding herself divorced, Larissa’s guilt of failing to please her baba collides with her own failed goals of being a wife, leaving her to question everything in her life. She equates her own fears of failure as a female as a family curse that she has no control over.

It’s always a risk whenever an author takes a stance on his impression of a character, whether it is female or male. Sometimes the voice can be captured bang on or totally fall flat. But you have to try. That’s the whole point of writing. As an author, it’s all about risk-taking and pushing the boundaries of comfort. My belief is that any writing done with passion for the character should ensure some degree of success in catching it right.

Your main character, Larissa, writes a blog post at the start of most chapters, where we’re given a glimpse into her thoughts on many different social, personal and, sometimes, political subjects. Are these posts a clever way of offering commentary about these various topics? Was there another goal in having blog posts kick off most chapters?

There were several intentions for the blogs.

As the reader, we are inside the mind of Larissa with the blogs. We are experiencing her unguarded thoughts as she races from moments of panic to despair, describing the plight of various family members to painful memories of her past growing up as an only female child. The blogs become Larissa’s cathartic release of anxious energy in order to come to terms with re-evaluating her life at age thirty as a divorced woman having to reside back at home with her parents. The blogs provide an opportunity to retrace Larissa’s footsteps throughout her life to shed some insights into why she was in the predicament where we join her as the reader. The blogs become a story within a story as we also begin following the antics of several extended family members and their own personal trials and tribulations that marry into Larissa’s own personal angst.

The blogs did provide me with a comedic opportunity, using them as a sounding board on some of the quirks of social norms between father and daughter, fallout of not being the most popular girl in school, awkwardness of post-marriage family reunions along with those first days shacking up as a married couple.

To backtrack on the conception of this book, its original concept was far from the finished product we see today. My idea at the time was to do something outside the confines of a contemporary book. I came up with an idea to write an entire book that was based on only a blog for each chapter that carried the flow of Larissa’s story. Over the course of three weeks, while on vacation, I finished a 150-page book with 55 chapters consisting of a blog and nothing else. Feeling like I had just written the next best thing that would hit the marketplace, I forwarded it to my publisher, waiting for the pat on the back and accolades for this cutting-edge idea I had just pulled off. My publisher came back to me stating that the concept was interesting, the ideas of the blogs were entertaining, but man, you’ve gotta write a story around the blogs! Crushed, but with a grin, I went back to conceptualize formulating an actual story around the blogs. As defeated as I felt at the moment, he was the voice of reason and after the pinch of humility, I felt the book came out far more complete. In fact, it earned from the publisher their Editor’s Choice Designation! So I guess that speaks volumes of the book’s quality for the publisher’s prized endorsement.

I assume this book is part of your comedic dating series? Which we hope will continue…?

Of course! These are fun books to create. I have a blast scripting characters, dialogue and story lines that keep the pages turning. I think there are endless scenarios to write about when it comes to love, hurt, relationships and the human hunt for acceptance. For many of us, we nearly develop an obsession to find love and often, after achieving it, we seem to adapt toxic behaviors that send the relationship into fiery destruction. There is humor within that pain.

As your third book in your comedic dating series, how would you say the series has evolved or changed with The Ukrainian In Me?

The Ukrainian In Me complements the dating series in a unique way. When we first met Gus in No Kiss Good-Night, he was a man on the cusp of turning forty and desperate to find love. He was still suffering from his last relationship disaster ten years earlier. His resolve was to focus on a dating website despite the reality that it continued to beat down his self-esteem with every date. In the end, it was pure chance that connected him with Mitch. Yet he allowed the resurgence of his past to nearly destroy what he had with Mitch. Gus eventually discovered his mourning for the past was holding him hostage from moving forward into a healthy relationship.

In Boom Chicka Wah Wah we catch up with Gus seven years later to find he’s settled into a fairly mundane relationship with Mitch. Now he’s being tormented by a male obsession to push his reckless side by performing death-defying stunts while Mitch is pressuring him to progress their relationship to get married and have children. The book showcases a common deal breaker in relationships: opposite goals and opposite views on marriage and having children fuelled by staunch refusal from both sides to settle into a healthy compromise.

With The Ukrainian In Me, we become part of someone at age thirty starting over again in relationships, having to reside back with her parents and told from a female perspective. Not only is Larissa working to find that perfect match, but during the process she is finding herself. During her self-discovery, Larissa comes to realize that her own happiness and contentment isn’t reliant on being in a relationship. For her own journey, it becomes about identifying the inner critic within herself and moving past it.

The first two books in your comedic dating series followed the personal and romantic struggles of Gus Adams. Can we hope to see a follow-up book about Larissa’s next phase of life?

Larissa will return! We’ve just scratched the beginnings with the dynamics of her mom and dad, her new man and the blossoming of her revitalized inner confidence. I’d like to see what Larissa does with her new-found independence. I’m sure her baba will have a thing or two to say about it!

Are you currently working on or planning any other books? If so, can you give us a little teaser as to what we can look forward to?

Absolutely! I do have plans for further books burning at my fingertips! My overall ambition is a third and possibly fourth book to complete the series with the relationship-fumbling Gus Adams in No Kiss Good-Night and Boom Chicka Wah Wah to fulfill his zany journey. I potentially envision one book bringing us back prior to No Kiss Good-Night to the feverish relationship with the gal Peta that eventually ripped out and shredded Gus’s soul and destroyed his confidence in dating women for the next ten years. But I also feel Gus and Mitch need to move things forward in their relationship which means for Gus to step up and lay down his seed and become a big poppa! But of course, Gus being Gus, nothing ever comes easy without a few self-imposed mountains to climb and a tumble back down, bruised and battered.

That being said, I’m currently working on the sequel to my third book, Crazy, Mixed-Up World. This book crazy mixed-up world coverwas a shift away from my usual lighter, comedic fare and moved to a darker and complex look within relationships. A common request from readers was asking what happened to many of the characters at the book’s conclusion because it is left purposely open-ended. Life does not have clearly defined destinations. At the book’s conclusion, the lives of the characters in Crazy, Mixed-Up World left us with a snapshot of outcomes from their actions, however, it left readers with the question – what next? The new book will see a few of those main characters return into what is promising to be situations as intense and shocking as the first book. Expect to see dramatic closure to these characters featured in The Jungle Room!

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The Ukranian in Me is available to purchase on:
Kevin’s website:
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Your Holiday Gift Shortlist: Books Worth Giving

Books are the gifts that keep on giving after the holiday season is over, and what better present can you give than to support indie authors (that’s a gift to them!) and introduce your friends and family to brand new writers? Plus, you can feel good that you contributed to a writer’s dream.

Before you turn to the major publishing houses, pick out some books from these self-published authors, who are just as excellent as mainstream authors.

By genre:

Action/Thriller

Against The Clock by Charlie Moore
The Phoenix Project by DM Cain

Autobiography/Inspiration

White Bees by Amy Wilde

Erotic Romance

Bound Series by Hanna Peach *The Romance Reviews and Night Owl Reviews top pick*

Fantasy

Activation Series by Joseph Murphy
Dark Angel Series
by Hanna Peach *#1 Amazon Fantasy Bestseller*
Finding Me by Dawn Brazil
Secret of the Last Born by TC Michael
Sword of Kassandra Series
by Joseph Murphy

Literary

Crazy, Mixed-Up World by Kevin Zdrill
Just Like a Musical by Milena Veen
Parasite Girls by Tory Gates
Quiver of the Pure Heart by Burnita Bluitt

Mystery/Suspense

Her Lying Eyes by Susan Wilson

Paranormal

The New Mrs. Collins by Quanie Miller
Shifty Magic Series by Judy Teel

Romance

Fate Accompli by MM Jaye
Clean version
Spicy version

Romantic Comedy

Cinderella Heiresses Series by Judy Teel
Kindle Edition
Paperback Edition
It Ain’t Easy Being Jazzy
by Quanie Miller
The Between Boyfriends Series by Sarka-Jonae Miller *Best Books of 2014 on Amazon*

Women’s Fiction

Indiscretion by Dahlia Savage
Graduation Day by Dahlia Savage

Meet Author Quanie Miller

Humor isn’t easy to write. In fact, it’s one of the hardest things to write because of how easily the punch line can be blown. Predictability will kill anything funny and at the same time, what you write should be as universally funny as possible, not only appealing to a few people who will know what you’re talking about.

Meet the master.

Quanie Miller’s first book, It Ain’t Easy Being Jazzy, hardly seems like her first. Her natural writing style makes you think she’s a seasoned pro. You won’t be able to help laughing out loud, and I mean that quite literally.

I interviewed Quanie recently about writing, her novel, and her hilarious yet relatable characters.

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Is this your first book? How long did it take you to plan it before you began writing it?

Yes, this is my first book! It probably took me about 3 months of planning before I started writing.

Do you plan your writing with outlines, character development exercises, and other pre-writing activities? Or do you just write as it comes to you?

I definitely have to outline when I write. I think of outlines as a roadmap. Sometimes I follow it or sometimes I veer off course a bit, but I always need to know where the story is headed.

What drew you to this genre?

I’ve just always loved writing funny stories with over the top characters who are always getting themselves into these hilarious situations. It’s a lot of fun. Sometimes they do or say things that I hadn’t anticipated. I laugh out loud a lot while writing.

Do you mostly write in this particular genre or do you write in other genres too? If so, which ones?

I also write paranormal novels. In fact, I was trying to write a paranormal novel when I sat down to write It Ain’t Easy Being Jazzy.  The novel was supposed to be about a woman who accidentally gets a job as a nanny and later discovers that the children’s new stepmother has mystic powers. So I start the story with the main character getting a flat tire in this affluent neighborhood and cursing her GPS for getting her lost. I was going to have her ring one of the door bells and get mistaken for an interviewee by the woman of the house. But when I started writing, she never made it to the house. She called her best friend to get directions and the banter between those two had me laughing out loud. I stopped and thought, “But wait a minute. This isn’t supposed to be funny!” So I had to take a step back and decide if I wanted to scrap what I had and rewrite it to make the tone consistent with a paranormal story or go in a completely different direction and write the funny story. I decided to write the funny story and I’m so glad I did because Jazzy and her family were a hoot to write (I later ended up writing the paranormal story. It’s called The New Mrs. Collins and will be out next year).

What do you think makes your work stand apart from other works in your genre?

Well, Jazzy is a Louisiana girl living in San Jose, California. She’s hilarious and she’s also got this southern sass about her, so when she meets all of these really quirky characters in Silicon Valley, some really funny situations occur that I think readers will enjoy.

Are any of the characters in your book based on people you know or have seen/talked to in real life? I’m especially interested in Aunt Cleotha with this question!

I think that all of my characters are some variation of me, my family and friends. I grew up around really funny and sassy women who didn’t mind telling you about yourself! You wouldn’t believe how many real life Aunt Cleothas I know!

Who’s your favorite character and why?

Definitely Aunt Cleotha. I cried laughing while writing her. She’s so funny and gives it to you straight no matter who you are.

Are you planning on writing a sequel? When can we look forward to it being published?

I am! I’m actually in the outline phase right now and hope to have it out within the next year.

Do your friends and family know you’re a writer? Were they surprised when you told them?

Oh, yes. It’s all I talk about so I’m sure I drive them crazy!

What inspires you to write? Music? Other books? Real life events? Just an incredible imagination?

I’m especially inspired by dialogue. The things that people say during conversation! It’s a goldmine for stories. Little quirks that people have also give me ideas for characters or sometimes I’m sitting there doing nothing and I’ll get this visual of a character doing something intriguing and I’ll go, “Whoa! Who are you?” I also get ideas by just watching people. For instance, my husband and I went out to dinner the other night and there was this seemingly nice couple a few feet away from us. I thought to myself, “They seem nice enough. But what if they’re over there plotting a murder?” And just like that the wheels start spinning.

Do you have any advice for other writers?

Find your voice as a writer. Don’t try and be like anyone else and don’t worry if your book isn’t like another author’s. You are unique and your story will reflect that, so don’t try and be like somebody else. Let your voice be heard!

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Connect with Quanie Miller:

Website: http://quaniemiller.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/QuanieMiller
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/QuanieMillerAuthor
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7218800.Quanie_Miller

Check out It Ain’t Easy Being Jazzy on Amazon:

It Ain't Easy Being Jazzy - Ebook Cover

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