HANK
PHILLIPPI RYAN: Some days on the writing road you meet a colleague who turns
out to be a lifetime pal. Jess Lourey and I have been on so many adventures,
and misadventures, and life changes and hurdles and hilarity—I cannot begin to
tell you. (Someday we will.)
Shannon
is a Forge colleague, and when I read her amazing first book, I knew were we
soul mates, too.
Then
Jess and Shannon met. And they teamed up to become the power sisters. Seriously.
They are a force of nature. And now,
with shelves of their individual books between them, they are once again taking
their show on the road. And their sisters at Jungle Red are welcoming them with
open arms, champagnes, and…fear of the dreaded mogus.
(Plus--you could win their books!)

I’m Shannon Baker on
the road to peddle Dark Signal, the
newest in the Kate Fox series, where it’s murder by railroad tie. Forge is
releasing a .99 Kate Fox short story September 17th, but at the time
of this writing, I don’t have a link, so I’ll put it in the comments. Jess
Lourey is announcing the ever-hilarious installment in the Murder by Month
series, March of Crime.
Shannon:
I recently ran a half marathon. It was my first. I’m 57 years old. I’d kind of
always wanted to run a ½ marathon, but the idea of actually racking up 13.1
miles seemed so far outside of my abilities (and the bounds of sanity), I
didn’t ever try. Jess, when was a time you challenged yourself to do something
you thought might be outside your abilities?
JESS
LOUREY: First, can I say how thrilled I am to be here? The Reds are amazing
women, and I count two of my favorite people among them: Hallie and Hank.
HANK
and HALLIE: Aw. We feel the same way. xo
JESS: Mwa-h.
So My 2016 TEDx Talk, and the book it inspired, Rewrite Your Life: Discover Your Truth
Through the Healing Power of Fiction, were so far out of my
comfort zone that I’m still finding my way back. Both deal with the
transformative power of turning your facts into fiction. The thing is, I don’t
write memoir for a reason. I like
hiding behind stories, and I had to drop my fiction fig leaf to share the
process with others. I am glad I did, but I’m still dealing with the psychic
terror.
Shannon,
congratulations on the half marathon! How’d you do? Did you have special
equipment? And why in the name of all things lazy did you do it?
Shannon:
A couple of things inspired me to run the race, not least was proving to myself
I wasn’t too old to try new, fun things. Once I convinced myself it might be
possible and even enjoyable, I immediately signed up for a race three months
down the road. I invited my daughter (who had talked about wanting to run a ½
marathon…someday) and her fiancĂ© to take a trip from Portland, OR to Tucson and
run it with me. With that, I was
set-in-cement committed.
Shannon:
As you can imagine, you don’t just wake up one morning and run 13.1 miles. I
found a training schedule that would take me to race day. And I stuck with it.
The first week my big run was only 6 miles. And the next week, 7 didn’t seem so
hard. The week I ran 10 miles nearly blew me away. Ten miles! Me? No way. After
that, adding one more mile a week didn’t seem insurmountable.
Jess:
Hmmm. Does it count as exercise to drink beer while I read about you training
for a marathon? Because that bottle isn’t making its way to my mouth by itself.
Also, you make this whole training process sound pretty smoo—oooth.
Shannon:
I suffered some set-backs along the way. I developed a hitch in my giddy-up (a
technical term) that required slacking off and lots of Ibuprofen. I contracted
a dread mogus flying to a book event. Nevertheless, I persisted. (I’ve been
waiting to use that quote!)
Jess:
What is a dread mogus? Also, rock on with that quote. I’m going to talk
politics here, and I’m going to keep it simple: women are capable, women are
amazing, and it is our time. Boys are welcome, too—some of my favorite people
are male—but it’s long past time to shake up the system. Back to our
regularly-scheduled programming: Shannon, after you peturped (I can make up
words, too) the dread mogus, what’d you do?
Shannon:
My daughter and her fiancé flew in, we carbo-loaded and bought new running
clothes, although my almost son-in-law only opted for new socks. Then ran the
race, in much better times than any of us believed we could, and I basked in
the glow of that accomplishment.
Jess:
Well-deserved. I felt the same way after my TEDx Talk, and when the backstage
pass I kept from the event snags my eye, I feel a tiny purr of that wonderful
“I did it, you guys I did it!” feeling you earn when you Do the Thing That Is
Hard. And what that thing is differs for all of us. For me, the combination of
sharing personal information I’d kept hidden for over a decade, public
speaking, and standing on the revered TEDx red circle was so terrifying for me
that I woke up at 2:00 am the night before my Talk, sweating cold, realizing
that I’d been gone for three days and hadn’t asked anyone to feed my cat. I was
on my phone, crying, scrolling through my contacts to see who I could call to
see if my poor kitty was even still alive, before I realized I don’t have a
cat.
I
learned something important about myself, and the world: we were put here to
push our boundaries. All the good stuff is on the other side of Uncomfortable I
Don’t Wanna. Shannon, what were your takeaways from the half marathon?
Shannon:
Through this, I learned that a mile can be really far, or hardly any distance
at all, depending on where I focused my attention (and what was on my
playlist). Any big chore can be tackled by breaking it into chunks. Commitment
and accountability are key. And whatever the journey, find comrades to share,
commiserate, and celebrate.
Jess:
Love it. As in running, so in life.
Shannon:
I admit that a few days after the race I felt let down and wondered if I ought
to schedule another race and see if I could better my time. But running is not
my passion. Writing is.

HANK: Love you guys so much--and congratulations on your wild success! (I am now doing the thing that is hard. So your inspiration comes at the perfect time.)
Reds and readers, what have you faced and conquered?
And wait--there's more!
JESS AND SHANNON: Yes, there's more! We are
each giving away three books on the Lourey/Baker Double-Booked Tour. For every
comment you make along our tour stop, you’ll get another entry in the contest.
We get lonely if you’re not talking to us. This is our last stop but we’ll count if you
check out our other visits.
September 2 Mysterious
Musings
September 5 Janice
Hardy
September 7 The
Creative Penn
September 9 Write to Done
September 12 Wicked
Cozy Writers
September 20 Rocky
Mountain Fiction Writers Blog
September 21 There’s
a Dead Guy in the Living Room
September 23 Femmes Fatales
September 24 Writer
Unboxed
September 25 Dru’s
Book Musings
September 27 Do
Some Damage
October 3 Terry Ambrose
October 12 Jungle Red Writers
Jess Lourey
(rhymes with "dowry") is best known for her critically-acclaimed
Murder-by-Month mysteries, which have earned multiple starred reviews from
Library Journal and Booklist, the latter calling her writing "a splendid
mix of humor and suspense." She is a tenured professor of creative writing
and sociology, a recipient of The Loft's Excellence in Teaching fellowship, a
regular
Psychology Today blogger, and a sought-after
workshop leader and keynote speaker who delivered the 2016 "Rewrite
Your Life" TEDx Talk. March of Crime, the 11th book in her humorous mystery series, releases September
2017. You can find out more at www.jessicalourey.com
Shannon Baker is the
author of the Kate Fox mystery series
(Tor/Forge). Set in the isolated cattle country of the Nebraska Sandhills,
Kirkus says, “Baker serves up a ballsy heroine, a colorful backdrop, and a
surprising ending.” She also writes the Nora Abbott mystery series (Midnight
Ink), featuring Hopi Indian mysticism and environmental issues. Shannon makes
her home in Tucson where she enjoys cocktails by the pool, breathtaking
sunsets, a crazy Weimeraner, and killing people (in the pages of her books).
She was voted Rocky Mountain Fiction Writer’s 2014 and 2017 Writer of the Year.
Visit Shannon at www.Shannon-Baker.com
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