My Totally Eighties Life by Z.A. Maxfield – Guest Blog and Giveaway

Long and Short Reviews welcomes Z.A. Maxfield who is celebrating the recent release of Hawaii Five Uh-Oh. Enter the Rafflecopter at the end of the post for a chance to win a box with Hawai’ian Island-related items, valued at $25.00 (US only please).

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Hi everyone! Thanks so much for welcoming me to the Long and Short Review blog for a little teaser of the newest “Plummet” story, Hawai’i Five Uh-oh.

My Plummet to Soar books are a series of affiliated books–super loosely based around Plummet To Soar, a fictional self-help book written by Mackenzie Detweiler. (The man from book one, who fell from a tourist helicopter and lived to tell the tale.)

Each of the books features some person touched by reading Plummet to Soar, whose life has changed because they were forced to rethink what they have and what they truly want.

Today, I thought I’d share five things you might not know about my totally eighties life, beginning with:

1. Stevie Nicks. Seriously. Is there a woman my age who doesn’t love Stevie? Who didn’t try to dress like her. Wear their hair like hers. I get now why the raspy, throaty voice gave me shivers to my toes, but even back in the day I would have called it a major girl crush. I saw Fleetwood Mac in concert, and also caught Stevie Nick’s solo tour. A lot of those songs were thoughtful. The lyrics were poetry. The music, compelling. I was in a California Fish Grill restaurant, just this morning, with the radio tuned to some kind of everything eighties station, and they played “Stop Dragging My Heart Around,” Stevie’s duet with Tom Petty. I told my husband I resented the implication that the healthy diners where we live are all our age – between close to and well past retirement, but it is what it is. Outside, there was a meetup of folks with classic cars, and inside, most of the diners were old enough to have purchased those songs as LPs or 45s.

2. MTV. You know what? A lot of people dug watching music videos back in the day. Everyone still makes them. I watched about a month and a half’s worth of MTV on the Z channel in the early eighties, but honestly? I was never a fan. Unlike listening to music in the background, they were designed to totally engage me. As a child of the sixties, I’d been trained to give a television my full attention, but it was obvious early on that music videos were only commercials and there was no there there. I found them insufferably boring. After the first time, I was done. A few good ones stick out in my mind: “Take On Me”, of course. Anything by Michael Jackson, but “Thriller”, especially. “Hot for Teacher”, by Van Halen because I hadn’t planted my feminist flag yet. Now, the only videos I watch have Beyoncé in them… I’d be embarrassed to say how many times I’ve watched “Lemonade,” all the way through.

3. Jane Fonda and Richard Simmons. I’ve always struggled with my weight, so these two are a natural. Between sparkly headbands, dolphin shorts, leg warmers, and high-cut leotards, I ate it all up. I worked out to their videos, got the stretchy bands and pulleys, and even purchased one of Jane Fonda’s manual treadmills, which turned out to be awesome, actually, something I used for years, and not only for fitness. Once, when my daughter had an elementary school project on statistics and probability, she devised a test where we elevated the machine and one of her brothers ran on it, while another threw buttered toast on the track, and a third recorded the results as each piece fell off the end: Whether it landed face up, or face down. What a terrific, creative way to use that equipment–and yes, it was a statistical dead heat. #Mythbusted

4. Marriage. A pretty girl named Diana got married to a prince in the eighties and then totally dominated the world of style until she passed, tragically young. I had my collection of Di hats until we moved a couple months ago. I know they’ll come back, so hit the thrift stores. They’re out there somewhere. You’re welcome.

5. Sexism. I worked as a computer programmer, which started out to be a really promising place for women in technology. My friend Joanne wrote one of the very first home computer video games. She was even written up in magazines! But programming and gaming became a boy’s club for the most part and women were getting 2/3 of what men earned. Let’s be honest, I don’t miss that part of the eighties at all.

But you know what? Now is such a good time to be alive. It’s the best time ever to be a writer. All the world’s information, art, literature, and news is yours for the push of a button! Sure, you have to be discerning and it’s easy to get confused by misinformation, but would you really rather live before the information age? I sure wouldn’t!

Tell me about your eighties life (or your twenties, whenever they happened.)

Best wishes for a wonderful, drama-free holiday season!

ZAM

Sarcastic cop Theo Hsu returns home to Hawai‘i after realizing he wants more from his life, and also, less. He hopes to reconnect with his past and make amends with his mother, who remarried a cool, distant man, leaving Theo unsure where he stands.

It doesn’t take him long to figure out where he wants to stand, though: right next to his childhood best friend, tattooed detective Koa Palapiti. Theo would like to upgrade their relationship, but Koa is putting out some seriously mixed signals. It’s a mystery Theo can’t let go, but just as they start to connect, kidnapping, murder, and a deadly game with international stakes get in the way. Koa wants to keep Theo out of it, and if it comes to a choice between him and Koa’s partner, Freddie Ortiz, Theo doesn’t like his chances.

But even if Koa wants to push him out of the investigation, and his life, Theo still has a few tricks up his sleeve. It’ll take all his special gifts, ingenuity, risk-taking, family ties—and even some kinky undercover work—to save the day… and the man he never should’ve let get away.

About the Author: Z. A. Maxfield started writing in 2007 on a dare from her children and never looked back. Pathologically disorganized, and perennially optimistic, she writes as much as she can, reads as much as she dares, and enjoys her time with family and friends. Three things reverberate throughout all her stories: Unconditional love, redemption, and the belief that miracles happen when we least expect them.

If anyone asks her how a wife and mother of four can find time for a writing career, she’ll answer, “It’s amazing what you can accomplish if you give up housework.”

Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads | Amazon

Buy the book at these online venues.

a Rafflecopter giveaway
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Focus and Flow by Z.A. Maxfield – Guest Blog and Giveaway


Long and Short Reviews welcomes Z.A. Maxfield who is visiting with us to celebrate today’s release of her newest book Plummet To Soar. Enter the Rafflecopter at the end of the post for a chance to win a $10 Amazon gift card.

Focus and Flow

Hi! My name is Z.A. Maxfield, and lately I’ve been working on changing some ideas I’ve had all my life about discipline and motivation. It turns out—I’ve got discipline by the crateload. If discipline is what it takes to begin and complete any long term project, I’ve got that. I’ve written a whole bunch of novels. Lost and kept off weight. Stopped smoking, stopped drinking. I am extraordinarily disciplined, when I need to be.

Recently one of my children decided to quit his job in order to study for an exam, and he was worried I’d be mad because I have to trust he’ll actually study. And it’s almost May, the beginning of summer. A lot could happen to distract him. The test is in late fall. But I know if he wants to pass it, there’s nothing I could throw in his way to keep him from it.

I have to trust his desire to pass, not his discipline. And it’s an excellent reminder I have to trust my own…

So my son Maxfield (Yeah, he’s the kid whose name I borrowed) and I are working on Focus and Flow. Focus is the spotlight of where I put my attention—it’s simply the ability to pay particular attention to some thing or idea. Flow is the steady continuous stream of something. And when I achieve a state of steady, continuous, purposeful focus that’s called Flow too, and it feels so awesome, I don’t need discipline at all. It’s a cycle of challenge and achievement that brings joy.

Creatives refer to the muse. Athlete’s talk about the zone. Writers sometimes talk about “unconscious” writing, where they might unintentionally link a concept or theme from one section of the book to another. Lately I’ve been looking for ways to get into focus, stay focused longer, and keep myself from negative distractions.

Most of us have oodles of discipline. What we lack is focus.

Here are five of my favorite Ted Talks on the subjects of focus, discipline, and motivation, in no particular order. I’ve watched these more than once, and I’ve discovered new things each time.

1. The art of Focus – A crucial Ability by Christina Bengtsson
2. Attention, distraction and the war in our brain by Jean-Philippe Lachaux
3. How the power of attention changes everything by Jeff Klein
4. How to fix the exhausted brain by Brady Wilson
5. How to stop screwing yourself over by Mel Robbins

Thanks so much for letting me spend time here, today! I hope that one of the Ted Talks that excited and motivated me does the same for you!

Best,

ZAM

Feckless, luckless, and charming, Mackenzie Detweiler is the author of a self-help book one reviewer calls “the most misbegotten motivational tool since Mein Kampf.” He’s maneuvered himself into a career as a life coach, but more often than not, his advice is bad. Really bad.

It’s even getting people hurt… and Mackenzie sued.

It falls to Mackenzie’s long-suffering editor, JD Chambers, to deliver the bad news. He chooses to do so face-to-face—to see if the spark he senses between them is real when they’re together in the flesh. Unfortunately, a snowstorm, a case of nerves, a case of mistaken identity, and finally a murder get in the way of a potential enemies-to-lovers romance.

There are many, many people who have good reason to want Mackenzie dead. JD must find out which one is acting on it before it’s too late for both of them.

Enjoy an Excerpt

ONCE MAC was alone, he opened his pop and poured himself an ice-cold plastic cupful. How he wished he’d purchased extra bottles of booze on the airplane. He knew it was going to be a long, long night. No matter how much he drank, sleep might not come.

It took ten minutes to unpack and slide his few boxes of books, swag, and audiobook CDs of Plummet to Soar out of the way. He hung his clothes and placed his socks and underwear in drawers. Then he unfolded and assembled his cardboard cutout—the one he used at book signings, where he looked like the love child of Tony Robbins and Captain Ron. NYT Bestselling author, Mackenzie Detweiler. Plummet to Soar.

After that, there was nothing to do but take a shower and hit the sack. Before he did, he unlocked and opened the connecting door. Just in case.

Why did he do it?

Because it was an old-school hotel, and because the connecting door was there, and because he wanted to leave just that much, that tiny bit of an opening into his world for Doug, if he should want it.

Completely passive. Completely legit, because unless Doug tried the door, he’d never know it was open on Mac’s side. That was the perfect metaphor for every awesome sexual encounter he’d ever had. Nobody planned those things. Someone just… opened a door.

Anyway, it wasn’t about sex. Douglas had more going on in his aristocratic head than sex. Not much more, maybe, but those cloud-gray eyes hid pain and disappointment and fragile, fragile hope that somehow, Mac had crushed before he even spoke a word. He felt the change in Doug’s handshake. That’s when he made up his mind that Doug had to be a shill.

But now? Maybe Doug was simply looking for more than a life coach could give? Maybe he was hoping for something rubber-stamped like twentieth-century philosophers or something occult or religion. He hated to tell the dude there were no certificates of authenticity. The plummet thing was going to be hard on him. Douglas would want someone to talk to, maybe someone to cling to.

Which, up until the clinging part, would be a piece of cake. Mac’s body resonated every time they barely brushed fingertips. So, until the plummet was over? Mac could be a shoulder, a sounding board, but not a body. Check.

Wasn’t going to be easy. Nothing is ever easy.

About the Author:Z. A. Maxfield started writing in 2007 on a dare from her children and never looked back. Pathologically disorganized, and perennially optimistic, she writes as much as she can, reads as much as she dares, and enjoys her time with family and friends. Three things reverberate throughout all her stories: Unconditional love, redemption, and the belief that miracles happen when we least expect them.

If anyone asks her how a wife and mother of four can find time for a writing career, she’ll answer, “It’s amazing what you can accomplish if you give up housework.”

Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Goodreads | Amazon Author Page

Buy the book at the publisher, Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Kobo, or iBooks.

a Rafflecopter giveaway
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