Writers speak truth

November 14, 2021

Review My Book on Amazon

Note: Amazon will not let you write a review unless you have purchased the book from them.

  1. Go to the Internet. In the blank at the top, type the URL: “Amazon.com” When the site comes up, you will see an empty white bar at the top of the screen, with the word “All” at its left.

    2. Click on the down-arrow that says “All”. You will see a long list of items.

    3. Scroll down to “Books” and click on “Books”
    The empty white bar reappears with the word “Books” in the same little grey box at the left.

    4. In the empty white bar, type in the name of the book and the name of the author: example: Perfect! A Story of Love and Suspense Sharon Hickey Sterling.
    When the picture of the book comes up, next to it you will see a bar of five orange stars and a number. They represent how well the book was rated by readers and how many readers reviewed it. (None, if it is brand new.)

    5. Click on the orange stars. Scroll down.

    6. Click on the red print “See All Customer Reviews”.
    In a grey Continue reading
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August 31, 2021

Like many of us humans, Sprout is a mongrel. He’s part chihuahua and part papillon. (Papillon, you know, the dogs with the butterfly ears.) I brought him home from the Humane Society–a trial adoption.

Immediately, he began taking me for a rushed, stumbling run/walk twice a day, A bad boy on the leash, he had all the energy of an enthusiastic little boy. I had a hard time keeping up.
But there were the big brown eyes, the dog-kisses on my face and hands, the lap-sitting while I watched TV. Also heart-warming were many bad doggie habits he did not have, such as cringing or freaking out at loud noises. One evening he sat on my lap as a thunderstorm approached. Thunder crashed loud. He raised his head, looked up at me. I patted him and said, “It’s alright.” He dozed again; he trusted me implicitly.

What can I say, I loved him. But he required almost as much attention and exercise as that energetic little boy. He needed a family with small children to play with, maybe another small dog as a friend to pal around with.
It was a sad day when I took him back to Continue reading

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August 28, 2021

To Write a Book Review on Amazon or Order a Book

Note: Amazon will not let you write a review unless you have purchased the book from them.

  • On the Internet, type:   “Amazon.com” When the site comes up, you will see an empty white bar appear at the top of the screen, with the word “All” at its left.
  • Click on the down-arrow that says  “All”.  You will see a long list of items.
  • Scroll down to “Books” and click on “Books”

The empty white bar reappears with the word “Books” in the same little grey box at the left.

  • In the empty white bar, type in the name of the book and the name of the author: Perfect! A Story of Love and Suspense Sharon Hickey Sterling. (It doesn’t have to be in bold type.)

When the picture of the book comes up, next to it you will see five orange stars and a number. They represent how well the book was rated by readers and how many readers reviewed it. (None, if it is brand new.)

  • Click on the orange stars. Scroll down. Click on the red print “See All Customer Reviews”.

In a grey box at the Continue reading

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April 15, 2020

Zayd had it made. His new owner, Me, loved him and understood him. He did not want to be part of a pack, sharing the person he owned with other canines. When his person was at home in her apartment, he graciously welcomed other human females into their domain to receive well-deserved compliments and stroking. But Zayd would not tolerate intrusion by a male.  At the slightest whiff of testosterone, his teeth-baring, growling fury would take over. He would courageously protect his person and his domain with his life. However, it was reasonable to panic and hide in the closet when stormy weather filled the air with booming sounds.

In return for all Zayd did, his human fed him well, took him to a vet when needed, walked him twice a day and generally doted on him. In return, he shared the big soft bed with her, as long as she didn’t take up too much room or pull the covers.

This is my bed, right?

Zayd tried to be good to her, but then — the unforgivable. An inkling of what was to come emerged when she brought another female (Pet Sitter was her name) into the apartment Continue reading

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November 29, 2019
Return to Paradise
Okay, it might not answer to that title, but after living in 
Florida for two and a half years, Arizona seems like heaven
to me. I wasn't born here, but lived and worked here in
Cottonwood for almost three years. Now "she's baaacck!"
The adorable town of Jerome, hanging on the side of a mountain,
is very close. So is Sedona, the New Age town of scenic wonders.
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July 10, 2019
Sterling Takes it on the Road!
  • Sharon’s Travel Briefs

*When the odometer on my 2004 Hyundai Elantra reaches 150,000 miles, I will throw her a party. (Maybe treat her to five quarts of that genuine, real, expensive, synthetic oil?) During my cross-country jaunt she didn’t fail me once, not with a hiccup, a stubborn start or a flat tire. I say her, because I recently named her Ruby, for her striking color. I thought I would never name a car but it reminds me of my daughter’s first vehicle, a small pickup truck in fire-engine red she named “Mama Zoom.” Later, when she added a camper top, I made curtains for it in a red and blue paisley material.

*Over the course of more than seven thousand miles and many fast food stops, my loyalty defected from Burger King to Wendy’s. Wendy’s has 5 kinds of salads!

*At a rest stop in Florida, a car pulled up in front of the building. A woman jumped out and ran toward the restroom, then the car pulled away to park. I thought, “What a nice man that husband must be.” When I spotted the driver, it was a woman.

*Down in Mississippi and Louisiana, everyone calls everyone else Continue reading

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August 31, 2017
Themes That Transcend the Plot

In August of 2017, at the Killer Nashville Writers’ Conference, I chose a panel discussion, out of dozens in the cart for that day, titled Why Write? Themes That Transcend the Plot. I believe all writers of fiction and nonfiction touch on themes of social and moral significance. Those who don’t consciously realize it miss the opportunity to deepen the beauty and meaning of their stories.

All writers write for one market, the market, humankind. All readers, from the little boy holding a graphic novel to the college psychology professor researching the difference between a psychopath and a sociopath, all readers are inviting into their individual lives knowledge, entertainment, and understanding of themselves and the world around them.

My own mystery/thriller novels hold elements, torn pages, in effect, from the newspaper, from the Bible, from every children’s book, Shakespearian play or classic novel I’ve ever read. Writers draw from their experience to put words on a page. They can also acquire self-knowledge from what that experience translates to on the page.

There is a saying that you are what you eat. I’d like to borrow that slogan to propose another truth: the writer is what the writer writes. What Continue reading

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August 29, 2017

Writers’ Conference, Killer Nashville.

Driving home to Florida from the Killer Nashville Mystery Writers’ Conference in Tennessee, I passed through Southern Alabama. It is a place rife with sharp contradictions. I passed through towns named Opp and Verbena. Along their main roads, I saw abandoned mobile homes, rusted farm machinery, and tumbled unpainted shacks. In the next mile, vintage two-story frame homes lined the road, their porches supported by white pillars. The houses might have aspired to–but obviously failed–to attain the size and quality of antebellum Southern plantations; nevertheless, they reminded me of another era of stability and genteel prosperity, the 1950’s.
The unoccupied landscape was another unworldly venue, the world of Kudzu, ruled by those creeping vines capable of engulfing every twig, every struggling plant, and climbing fifty-foot-tall pine trees. Kudzu vines blanketed some areas of the countryside, transforming them into huge waves, undulating seas of leafy green, more alien, more impenetrable and more forbidding than any jungle.
Then the eeriest experience of all. I passed through a landscape of newer homes, large and well-kept, set back from the road amid acre upon acre of cut grass. It was a gently swelling grassy veld, almost like a park.
Sensations Continue reading

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June 6, 2017
Winning-How Sweet It Is

There’s nothing like winning an award to boost confidence and inspire one to continue on the chosen path! Fatal Refuge, Book Two of the Arizona Thriller Trilogy won second place in the Colorado Independent Publisher’s Association Mystery/Thriller contest.  Even greater was the first place win in the National Indie Excellence Awards, category Regional Fiction, Southwest.

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