Writing Mysteries Like a Real Golden Age Author – An author Interview with Anthony Slayton
Anne has an abiding interest in history, folklore, sociology and nature. And is passionate about animal welfare and care of the earth. She is the author of When Silence Hurts and Reapers of Justice.
The Crossing – The need for reconciliation and forgiveness. An interview with historical fiction author Ashby Jones

1920s Prohibition turned many mothers into bootleggers and women into entrepreneurs
In the 1930s, Hollywood was rising, but it wasn’t the centre of international cinema yet. Other nations had flourishing silver screen productions. London was at the forefront.
It is still not widely known that women ran the industry in the silent film era. Directors, screenwriters, producers, writers were women.
Researching history for historical fiction writing may sometimes require some creativity. That’s how author Allie Therin ended up reserching 1920s every day life on newspaper ads.
CHEROKEE AMERICA by Cherokee citizen Margaret Verble is a Western novel the kind of which you’ve never read, about an unfamiliar sleeve of American history
The Challenge of Time: Writing the 1920s for the 21st Century Reader – Interview with Sherilyn Decter, author of crime fiction set in the 1920s
Women entered journalism by force and boldness. In the early days of journalism they were not scared to go on the wildest quest.
The sink of the Titanic was the first modern disaster. The first people around the worls sperimented as their own. Were still doing, 100 years later
Retrofuturism in Dieselpunk oftentimes appears as a particular kind of retrotechnology. Author Grace E. Robinson speaks about how you go about creating it