A little bit about Jean in A One-way Cruise to Africa

 

A One-way cruise to Africa is a cautionary tale of sex trafficking on the internet, written with a light touch, suitable for New Adults (19-29 & up). It has no explicit sex. Suspense/Romance. Buy on Amazon Kindle: https://www.amazon.com/author/janellehooper

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    Jean, Maku’s delusionary procurer in Washington State, knew how to turn sex trafficking into a piece of cake:

When Jean looked out her window and saw a yard full of FBI men…she went into the kitchen and poured a hot cup of coffee and cut herself a big piece of chocolate cake. She had a freezer full of them; they were one of her props. Whenever she needed to look innocent, she slid one of the cakes onto a plate, warmed it in the microwave, and set it on the kitchen counter. It made the whole house smell like home. How could a woman who smelled like chocolate be dangerous? Jean smiled to herself. She was brilliant!

 

Thanks for stopping by! Buy A One-way Cruise to Africa on Amazon Kindle. It’s a good read, I promise

I’m With Johnny Cash

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I’m with Johnny Cash
Janelle Meraz Hooper

I’m not judging all of you who are wearing colorful masks to protect yourself from Covid-19. I get it. Americans are known for their sense of humor during a crisis. We have war humor, political humor, and religious humor. We have jokes about dead cats, dogs that bite, and even deadly snakes crawling around in planes.

So, go for it. Order that mask with Van Gogh’s missing ear on it. The one with the one-fingered Trump salute across the front. The one with your business card on it. And bring out the glitter and the ones with squiggly eyes. Have fun!

But, for this crisis, I just don’t feel it. I don’t think I’ve made one crack about Covid-19 since it emerged. Remember when Johnny Cash came on stage dressed in black when the Vietnam War was at its worse? He vowed to wear nothing but black until the war was over and our boys came home.

That’s the way I feel. My mask is black. Too many people have died. We’ve all lost family members. People are hungry. A lot of us are jobless. Schools are closed. And on and on.

I already have Manolito’s black hat that he wore on High Chaparral. Maybe I’ll wear that with my black mask. And cowboy boots…I need some black ones. I think Johnny would approve.

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How I find my characters…

How I Find my Characters
Janelle Meraz Hooper

Some of you have asked where I find the unusual characters in my stories. They come from a lifelong habit of people watching! It started when I was a kid. On hot summer nights, when I was growing up in Oklahoma, we often piled into my Aunt Pat’s car, drove downtown, and parked right in the middle of the block.

With my Aunt in the driver’s seat and my mom riding shotgun, my cousin Bob and I would settle in for a night when the sidewalks were filled with Native Americans from several tribes, Mexicans, Lebanese, Germans, black people, and Asians. My aunt and mother knew a lot of people from each group and were on friendly terms with many of them. They often stopped by our car to visit and trade news about the latest powwow coming up, the German Octoberfest, which artists had signed up for the summer art show, and more. So, it shouldn’t be surprising that the seeds of observation were planted in my memory at an early age. Here’s a few ideas:

A Three-Turtle Summer, my first fictional autobiography in the Turtle Trilogy, I got lucky. I came from a large Hispanic family whose members I had adored all my life. They all signed releases thinking I’ve never get a novel started, much less finished!
In my Trilogy, I did change a few names. My Aunt Pat became Pauline. Not for any reason that I can think of. Maybe I was on a power trip! I renamed myself Glory because I didn’t think “Janelle” fit the character I was writing about.

As Brown as I Want, the middle book in my Turtle Trilogy has a lot going on including attempted murders, but once I realized I could write and control the story, I decided that I wanted my mom to (finally!) have a good man, so I added one more character. He ended up taking over the book! I found him at a powwow at the high school in Federal Way, Washington. He was sitting about six seats away and I couldn’t take my eyes off him. He looked like an Apache even though the Native Americans in Washington State were from other tribes. He had a long braid at the back of his head and his neatly pressed navy-blue cotton shirt had an allover design of tiny white arrows. He became my Powwow Pete—if he only knew! I never spoke to him, of course.

Custer & His Naked Ladies, the third novel in my Turtle Trilogy, had a lot of my family members from the first two books, but I needed two new characters, Soap and his mother. I couldn’t see him, but my new Soap drew me from across a drugstore at the mall in Lawton with his rich voice. When I finally found him at the cash register, I could see he was tall for a Comanche. Maybe a Kiowa? No matter. His hair was in a long black braid down his back and his baseball cap was on backwards. He wore his blue and white striped painter’s overalls with a vibrant Hawaiian shirt underneath. To me he looked like a Norman Rockwell painting. On his feet, he wore white, sockless, running shoes. Woot! There he was! Glory’s romantic interest. I needed him because although the first two novels were based upon my life, Custer & His Naked Ladies was fiction. I had already been married for years by the time I wrote Custer & His Naked Ladies. His mom, Maxine, came from a Native American that fed me and my cousin, Bob, fry bread at a powwow once. What a nice woman.

I have a lot of other books and stories, but you get the idea. For more information, follow the link to my Amazon Author page: https://www.amazon.com/author/janellehooper

Jan Pippins and Henry Darrow publish Lightning in the Bottle

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  Jan Pippins and Henry Darrow have been awarded the  2014 Gold Medal Winner of the Readers’ Favorites Book Award in the Non-Fiction, Biography category for their book, Lightning in the Bottle.

The book can be purchased at Amazon and Barnes & Noble bookstores in several formats.

 

 

 

 

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How I get my story ideas

Janelle Meraz Hooper

 I’m sometimes asked by non-writers if I ever get story ideas from my dreams? The answer is, sadly, no.

   Early one morning, I was describing my latest wacky dream to my husband as he was getting ready for work.
   It went like this: I was in marketing and had a group of conference attendees at the bottom of the ocean sitting in a circle in school desks.    The water was clear. Little multicolored fish were swimming by…the conference attendees were dressed in their nicest business clothes…when it came time to feed them, I filled the basket of my four-wheeled wheelchair scooter with boxed chicken dinners and drove around and around in a circle on the top of the water dropping boxes to them—but the boxes wouldn’t sink. They just floated on top of the water.

   As my husband was leaving the bedroom, he looked over at me and said, “You know what your problem was don’t you? You were trying to serve chicken. You should have been serving fish!” With that he left. No goodbye kiss, no hug. He knew better than to get too close to me with a line like that!

the end

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