Five Top Passions and a Few Guilty Pleasures by Sarah Black – Guest Blog

Long and Short Reviews welcomes Sarah Black, who is celebrating today’s release of War Paint.

Five Top Passions and a few guilty pleasures

These are the things I care most about in my everyday life. The list has changed over time, but today, here are the top five:

1. Local food, farmers’ markets, and co-ops. I am very passionate about local food, and support the farmers and the local co-ops to, hopefully, move us toward a more sustainable food system. I am extremely bothered by the condition of farm workers and farmers in America, and also don’t like the notion of the environmental impact of shipping food across the country in trucks. When I walk around my new city of Roanoke, I keep an eye out for small plots of land that can support an urban agriculture initiative. Roanoke has one of the most active local food movements in the country, with a daily farmers’ market I can walk to in ten minutes. But though I am passionate about these things, I also love cheese, and can justify cheese moving its slow way from France or Italy to my kitchen. Because, you know, cheese!

2. Dogs. I love my rescue dog. I love most dogs I come across and would bring them all home if I could. I think dogs can see right into our hearts, and that’s why they are so ready to love. I tend to be a bit shy, but my dog meets lots of people and brings me along. He’s been going into every bar with an open door we pass—not sure what that is about.

3. I love sewing by hand, and knitting, crochet, lace-making—the old ways that are slow and beautiful. With a good light and some beeswax to keep the thread from tangling, I can sew for hours. I crochet sometimes without making anything in particular, just moving meditation. I have a passion for old handmade quilts and antique lace, and will carry these beauties home and put them on my bed and love them until they are in pieces, as they were intended. I always use them. I think they want to be used.

4. I am becoming a minimalist since retirement. What I need to be happy is getting smaller and simpler with time, and now I live in a tiny downtown pad with my son, and we share a bathroom and my closet is also the linen closet. I can live in leggings and denim shirts; I wear red Keds almost every day. Some days I don’t even put on makeup. I’ve sold the car and we walk everywhere, which limits the amount of stuff we can haul home.

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Thanks for reading my new story! War Paint,/I> is out May 25 from Dreamspinner.

Mural artist Ben has come from Tel Aviv to Atlanta to work on a commission. A successful artist, he’s still lonely and isolated after his family’s rejection. Ben is charmed and surprised when local soldier Eli mistakes him for homeless, and brings him a cup of coffee and a biscuit. This gesture opens the door. Eli is lost, trying to make sense of a future without the Army after a combat injury ends his career.

Art gives them a new language and a path forward. But lost men can reach out, desperate to hang on to anyone close. Is what they find together real, and the kind of love that will last?

About the Author: Sarah Black is a writer, artist, veteran, and mom.

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Buy the book at Dreamspinner Press,

The Year My Mother Let Me Read Romances by Sarah Black – Guest Blog

Long and Short Reviews welcomes Sarah Black who is celebrating today’s release of American Road Trip. You can read our review of it here.

The Year My Mother Let Me Read Romances

In 1972, my dad was transferred down to Key West to go to Submarine School. We moved halfway through the school year, and I was sent off to St Mary’s for the rest of sixth grade. I was happy to be out of Pascagoula, Mississippi. I didn’t fit in. I thought Key West was right up my alley. I tried to read some Ernest Hemingway to get ready but nothing he wrote made any sense. Mother was reading Tennessee Williams.

It turned out the nuns at St Mary’s were not as free spirited in regards to uniform regulations as I was hoping. They did not appreciate my rainbow knee socks, the ones I wore to honor Janis Joplin. In fact, they pulled me out of class and made me sit on a bench outside the office until my mother could pick me up.

On the plus side, we could wear our Girl Scout uniforms on Wednesdays. My next opportunity I rolled up the hem and taped it to a reasonable 1972 level with Scotch tape. Then I climbed a tree on the playground and waited for an interesting boy to show up. One did, and he had red hair and a cigarette lifted from his dad. The nuns were not amused at this, either, and called Mother to come get me again.

Mother might have been on their side regarding the taped hem, but the nuns had made a couple of mistakes. First, she overheard the office staff referring to us as “transients” when we were enrolling. That did not sit well. Then the nuns gave me a group of placement tests, and I scored off their charts. So they asked me if I had been cheating, and did I need to go to confession? No, I did not, and I told them I did not need to cheat because I was smart and their tests were easy. They called my mother and reported both the tree and Girl Scout uniform incident, and told her I had been caught cheating. And she said she didn’t believe it. I didn’t need to cheat, because I was smart, and a reader.

Then they made their second mistake. A nun laughed at the idea that I was smart, and a reader. So my mother brought my library list to the office. I was back on the bench outside, my usual spot. My mother must have been working on her speech as she drove to the school, because she lit in the moment she hit the office door. She didn’t speak to me; just pointed a finger that I took to mean ‘don’t move.’ She described the history of my reading life, the libraries in which I owned a card, my current books from the local library, and the books the family owned, at great expense, including a set of Great Books that had been saved when a hurricane blew our house down because they had been wrapped in plastic and put up high because the Great Books, and all books, were more valuable to us that anything else.

It was a great speech, and unfortunately the nuns were then able to hit back regarding the tree and the red headed boy and the cigarette. Mother was game, though. She said she would deal with it, because she was the parent, and they were never again to misunderstand that they had a reading prodigy in their midst.

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American Road Trip, out March 16 from Dreamspinner. A free epilogue, Tino Takes the Cake, will be available free on the Dreamspinner blog on release day!

A single moment—or a single mistake—can change everything.

When Captain James Lee Hooker and his lover, Sergeant Easy Jacobs, were in the Army, they made a mistake that got a young soldier hurt. Three years later, they’re civilians again, living far apart, haunted by what they lost. Now that young soldier needs their help.

With his grandmother’s one-eyed Chihuahua riding shotgun, James Lee climbs into Easy’s pickup for a trip across the American Southwest. They set out to rescue a friend, but their journey transforms them with the power of forgiveness.

About the Author: Sarah Black is a writer, a reader, an artist, a veteran, and a mom. She has been a Lambda finanlist and nominated for a Pushcart.

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Buy the book at Dreamspinner Press, Amazon, or Barnes and Noble.