Tag Archives: the watch dog

The Watch Dog: Become A Character Twitter Contest!

The Watch Dog: Become A Character Twitter Contest!

Now that Sandy Lo hit the 400 follower mark on Twitter, she is holding a special contest open to her followers only!  The winner of this contest will have a character in Sandy Lo’s upcoming novel “The Watch Dog” based on them!  This character will have your name, personality traits and/or maybe some awesome unfulfilled dream of yours come true!  You’ll also receive a free autographed copy of “The Watch Dog” once it is complete and before everyone else!

HOW TO WIN:

1. Make sure you’re following @AuthorSandyLo on Twitter.

2. Send a tweet to @AuthorSandyLo and explain why you would make a good character in 140 characters or less!

3. Including the hashtag #TheWatchDogContest might earn bonus points.

CONTEST ENDS: March 25, 2012.

The Watch Dog – Chapter 1

The Watch Dog – Chapter 1

A cigarette sat in a filthy ashtray in the tiny kitchen. Garrett Baker hung up the telephone with a sigh. His mother didn’t sound as pleasant as he hoped. They hadn’t spoken much in the past couple of years, and he knew she was ashamed of him.

At thirty, Garrett wondered how he managed to mess his life up this severely. He stared down at the one-way ticket to Nashville, Tennessee that his younger brother had sent him.

Garrett had no more excuses why he couldn’t come home for Thanksgiving. Money had been a common reason. Since dropping out of community college ten years ago, he hasn’t been able to secure a job; a legal one at least. He tried his hand selling various narcotics and running illegal poker tournaments in the basement of some dive bar in Hell’s Kitchen.

Karma came back to bite him every time, though. In the past five years, he had been arrested three times and his illegal operations were shut down. Luckily, the courts have been lenient and only gave him a slap on the wrist.

He had finally landed a job as a bartender at an upscale lounge on the East Side when he made a pass at a gorgeous redhead. Her boyfriend didn’t like that too much.

Before Garrett knew it, he was slapped with assault charges and sent to prison for eighteen months along with a hundred hours of community service. The judge no longer had sympathy for him, and neither did his public defender, Cara Benson, whom he had more than a professional relationship with.
Cara saw him as someone she could fix. He fed her so many lies, which he now knows is not the best idea to mess with the woman who can help you maintain your freedom. Garrett had slept around on her, used her for a place to stay, and on more than one occasion, verbally abused her.

Garret couldn’t believe what a disaster he made of things. He is lucky if he can get a job in food service or as a taxi driver with his record. From a young age, he was money hungry and treated people terribly—even his own family, especially them. He doesn’t claim to have a good heart somewhere deep down; he knows how callous he is.

Someone pounded at the door. Garrett put his cigarette out and pushed back from the table; the metal chair scraping against the worn, cracked floor shooting a chill through his body.

“Open up, Baker,” the throaty voice of his landlord barked.

Garrett groaned as he slowed his pace down. He ran an aggravated hand through his dirty blonde hair. When he finally opened the door, the landlord, who was short enough to be eye level with Garrett’s chest, shoved a paper into it.

“You’re out, Rett.”
“Pete, come on, you can’t do this to me,” Garrett pleaded.
“You’re two months behind on rent. Did you even find a job yet?”
“Look, it’s not easy. I’m going to see my mother—I’ll get the money from her.”
“I’m done,” Pete said with animated hands. “You’re not going to learn if people keep cutting you breaks.”
“Where am I supposed to go?”
“Maybe you should spend some time with the mother you keep mooching off of.”
Pete walked away before Garrett “Rett” Baker could say another word.
“Shit,” he hissed and crumpled the eviction notice in his hands.

Slamming his door shut, Garrett went into a rage. He tossed what little furniture he had. It hit him that he has nowhere to turn. He picked up his prepaid cell phone and called his parole officer.

“What is it now, Baker?”
“Paul, I need help, man. I just got evicted and I have no job.”
“There’s nothing I can do for you, I’m sorry. Apply to McDonald’s. I can hook you up at a shelter.”
“I’m not staying at no shelter,” Garrett snapped.
“I can pull some strings and allow you to leave the state.”
“What good would that do me?”
“Go home, Garrett, to Tennessee.”
“I am, for the holiday—I told you…”
“No, I mean permanently.”
“Paul, I’m not going back to that loser town.”
“Oh because you’re such a winner, right?”
Garrett was silent.
“Suck up your pride and face your family. They’re the only people you have left, if you’re lucky.”

With that, Officer Paul Johnson hung up. Just then, the lights went out in Garrett’s apartment.
Complete darkness. He sat there for hours, memories of his little town near Nashville, Tennessee swirling around his head.

“Rett, leave him alone!” Cori Davis yelled.

She was defending her younger brother, Mark. I was holding him down on the ground with my foot pressed to his face.

“What are you going to do, sit on me, Cori?” I laughed at her.

She was overweight and always a do-gooder. With me being the bad boy in town, we didn’t get along.
Mark cried from his spot on the ground.

“He’s got to learn to be a man and he sure as hell is not going to learn it from you or your mama the way you baby him. He needs to learn to fight back and your daddy’s not around to teach him.”
“Well, he wouldn’t need to learn if you’d stop picking fights with him!”

Cori tried to push me off of Mark and I pushed her back. She fell to the ground with a thud. Her round face with her big brown eyes looked at me with raw hatred, and for a moment, I felt bad. Cori stood up, awkwardly trying to push off her weight.

“You think having your daddy made you so much better, Rett?”

I could vaguely hear Mark quivering underneath my foot.

“Cori, don’t…” he stammered.
“He’s an abusive alcoholic who messed you up!”

I lifted my foot off of Mark and spit in Cori’s face. I could tell it took everything inside of her not to burst into tears.

“Rett, come on!”

I turned around and my girlfriend, Shelly, was standing by my car. Her wavy brown hair was being twisted between her fingers.

“Leave fatty and her brother alone,” she smirked over at Cori before looking back at me.

I didn’t even bother looking back at Cori and Mark Davis before walking over to Shelly to greet her with a kiss; the kind of kiss no parent would approve of their sixteen-year-old child performing.

Garrett grabbed his jacket and left the apartment. He roamed around the neighborhood, not sure what he was searching for; an opportunity to fall out of the sky maybe. He knew that wouldn’t happen though. No opportunities that wouldn’t land him back in jail were just going to fall into his lap. He was stuck—even if he did get a minimum wage job, he couldn’t make rent anywhere in Manhattan. Not even in his boxlike apartment in a project building in the worst neighborhood.

Drug deals were happening on every other corner. Arrests were happening on the corners in between those deals. Garrett could get back into something illegal in the blink of an eye, but jail time is not something he could take again.

Being a Southern white boy in a mostly black and Hispanic prison, Garrett wasn’t the tough guy with the rugged good-looks anymore. He was a “honky hick” who would get his jaw unhinged if he even looked at the other inmates a second too long.

And that almost had happened—twice. The first full night of sleep Garrett was able to get while he was serving time was when he wound up in the hospital for a fractured jaw.

The second time wasn’t nearly as bad—the injury hadn’t completely healed from the first break. He was already numbed with painkillers. They were the best part of the experience. The medication made him fuzzy and even delusional at times—mostly at night.

He would dream about his childhood. Sometimes he was reliving the beatings his father had given him and his brother. Other times, he was at his grandmother’s and smelling his favorite cherry cobbler. It had won awards at the state fair.

It was thoughts like Granny’s cobbler that brought a smile to Garrett’s face, and made him think going home wouldn’t be all that bad. Then he remembered how hard he tried to escape Cayuga, Tennessee. He didn’t want to end up some small town nobody working on some tractor. To him, the South was made up of simple minded people who settled for less because they couldn’t do better.

There was another reason Garrett did not want to go home. Cayuga represented the childhood he wanted to forget.

The Watch Dog

The Watch Dog

Release Date: Unknown/In Progress
Genre: Fiction/Supernatural/Drama

LIKE this book on Facebook: www.facebook.com/thewatchdogbook

Garrett “Rett” Baker has taken one too many wrong turns in life that slams him into a dead-end. He finds himself forced to return to his small town life in middle Tennessee where he left behind broken relationships and bad memories. With plans to leave as soon as he saves some cash, Garrett finds himself living in his deceased grandmother’s home.

Bittersweet memories come rushing back to Garrett, and the ghosts of his past begin to haunt him. The one thing from his childhood he keeps trying to find–his long gone mutt, Brownie, seems to be what is leading him to places he doesn’t want to go, and people he never wanted to see again.

Read now…

Prologue

Chapter 1

The Watch Dog – Prologue – Full Novel Due 2012

The Watch Dog – Prologue – Full Novel Due 2012

The barking was echoing through my skull; the low growl ringing in my ears in between the bellowing howls. I sprang up in the bed forgetting where I was. My eyes adjusted to the moonlight from the window. I ignored the sleeping girl next to me and slithered out of the bed.

I searched my clothes out on the hardwood floor and dressed quickly. Slowly and quietly I walked to the window and looked down the peaceful block tucked away in the Hamptons. There were a few mansion-sized houses on the street and many trees in between them.

Seeking out the source of the barking, I glanced up and down the block. The cold glass of the window pressed against my body as I leaned closer.

Stupid stray dog.

The barking had sounded as if it was right next to my ear. The sound was familiar and I couldn’t figure out why.

Growing up, I never had pets and I was not an animal person by any means. There was only one dog I had ever liked and she had passed away over fifteen years ago. I began to wonder if the girl I went home with had a massive dog; an extremely protective dog who didn’t like me in her bed. Fearful of my possible revelation and also cowardly, I left the house quickly. The dog was merely a deranged excuse to ditch the girl before she awoke. I didn’t leave a note or my number. I doubt she caught my name and if she did, she probably didn’t remember it. Damned if I knew her name…

The Struggle

The Struggle

I think it’s important to reevaluate your options and choices in life.  What works for you when you’re twenty might not work for you when you’re twenty-five.  What worked for you last year might not work for you this year.

A few years ago, I would have never thought I’d be living in Nashville.  I would have never thought I would have published three novels.  Ten years ago, I would have never thought I would have founded my own magazine and interviewed some of my favorite celebrities.  My point is you never know where life will lead you and not every decision has to lead to forever.

As everyone knows, StarShine Magazine has been my identity for so long that I feel like I can’t let it go completely.  However, I realize in order to fully take the next step in my writing career, I have to say goodbye to it.  Maybe for a year.  Maybe for five years.  Who knows?

“The Watch Dog” is my focus right now and I want to make it my best book yet.  I want to see it in bookstores.  I want to see my name on the New Times Bestsellers’ list one day.  By hiding behind StarShine’s dying brand, my writing is wavering along with it.

I tend to take on too much and therefore can’t fully bring any of my projects to their full capacity.  2012 will be the year my writing career breaks from the shadows and into the spotlight.  I spent years trying to help spread the word of so many celebrities—both new and old—and yet, I barely spent any time promoting my own name in comparison.

I’m taking down the StarShine Magazine section of the site as of November 1st.  I’m also deleting the sandy@starshinemag.com e-mail account as of then as well.  My interviews/articles can still be found in the archives.

I hope fans of StarShine Magazine understand.  I know I’ve been bipolar with this decision, but you can understand why.  It’s not something I can easily let go.  I actually have a journalism journal I kept and I would love to share with you some entries from it on occasion.  These entries are what I don’t get to tell you about in StarShine.  You’ll read the excitement I had, the accomplishments I achieved and the bad experiences I had as well.

Running a magazine practically alone for 10 years has been a constant struggle.  Allowing myself to be free of it will give me new focus and room for creativity in my writing projects.  I hope you guys will stick with me and check back at the site often.

Hugs, Kisses & Stars,

Sandy Lo

*I want to give a special thank you to my best friend Natalie Hoskins for being my sounding board, my positivity and assistant when I needed her the past 10 years! Love you.

EXPRESSIONS Will Be the Third Installment of the DREAM CATCHERS SERIES Released Sept. 20th!

EXPRESSIONS Will Be the Third Installment of the DREAM CATCHERS SERIES Released Sept. 20th!

EXPRESSIONS is the third and final installment to Sandy Lo’s DREAM CATCHERS SERIES set to be released Tuesday, September 20, 2011 for Kindle and Paperback.  The book is a series of vignettes written from the point-of-view of various characters throughout the book series.  “This was my chance to give a voice to some of the minor characters like Jordan’s brother Drew and the infamous Bippy Reynolds,” explains Lo.  “If you enjoyed DREAM CATCHERS and BREAKING THE MOON, this is the perfect 50-page quick read to compliment them.”

DREAM CATCHERS was first released in January 2010 and garnered independent book sales for Sandy Lo, especially in New York and on Kindle.  “LOST IN YOU was my first novel and it put my name out there, but with DREAM CATCHERS, I’m still receiving royalty checks from Amazon and keep selling out of copies at book signings,” she says.

Sandy Lo followed the book up with BREAKING THE MOON, which delved deeper into the love story between Haley and Jordan and all of the complications that came along with it.  “Releasing a sequel is a slower moving process, especially since so many people still need to read DREAM CATCHERS, but the exciting part is the more people who read that first book come back and want BREAKING THE MOON, and I’m hoping they’ll want EXPRESSIONS as well,” Lo says.

Fans of TORTURED, the fictional rock band from the series, will be happy to know EXPRESSIONS will feature five never before seen song lyrics.  Originally, Sandy Lo wanted to record an entire album of Tortured songs with the help of friend, musician and songwriter, James Manzello.  “Unfortunately, James doesn’t have much free time these days and with no funding backing us, we had to lay that idea to bed for the time being.”

In November, just in time for the holiday season, Sandy Lo plans to release a collector’s edition of the entire DREAM CATCHERS SERIES.  It will be the first hard cover release from the author.

Earlier this month, Lo left her home state of New York to relocate to Nashville in order to write her next novel, THE WATCH DOG, which is set in Nashville.

For more information on Sandy Lo and her upcoming projects: www.sandy-lo.com.

Follow her on Twitter: www.twitter.com/authorsandylo.

Become a Fan on Facebook: www.facebook.com/authorsandylo.

Look Out Music City…

Look Out Music City…

Me and my sister Cindy near Lake Watauga in Centennial Park.

Hey Everyone!

So if you follow me on Twitter/Facebook, I’m sure you’ve noticed I’ve been talking an awful lot about honky tonks and Southern living…Well, that’s because as of August 2, 2011 I will officially be a resident of Nashville, Tennessee!  This move of mine has been planned officially for over a year, but I’ve thought about it for a while before that.  Most people ask me why would I want to move away from New York…

To put it simply: I’m sick of New York.

The hustle and bustle of being in Manhattan can drive me crazy, but what’s even worse is living just outside Manhattan in Staten Island or Long Island and having to travel by boat, train, bus, etc. for hours to get to an event is brutal.  I don’t drive and that doesn’t bother me for the most part.  In Long Island, however, it’s frustrating.  I only moved there to spend time with my niece and nephew before I moved to Nashville – and to save money for my move.  It’s impossible to get around in Long Island without a car.  As for Staten Island, transportation isn’t really the issue, except for when I have to go into Manhattan and transportation always fails me…The steamy subways and their annoying re-routes, the ferry and its crazies…

Anyway, I love New York.  I do – it will always be home to me in some way.  My family and friends are there and I will miss them all terribly, but something has been pulling me away.  So with the start of my 4th novel, “The Watch Dog”, I decided I needed a new inspirational environment to set the scene for this book.  Nashville popped into my mind when I thought about the main character Garrett “Rett” Baker.  So the seed was planted and the more time I spent working in Manhattan, the more I wanted to leave New York.

Last Wednesday, I left for my first visit to Music City…Nashville far exceeded my expectations!!  The history, the scenery, the music, the nightlife – wow!!  I am so proud to be moving here!!  Nashville is the perfect mix of big city in a small town!  The people are so friendly and literally, there’s live music everywhere you go, except for Starbucks, which is where I am now.  Starbucks is pretty much the same everywhere, which is good – since I’ll still be working here, so it’s like the comfort of something from home whenever I need it.

Anyway, I figured it has been a while since I last blogged and thought you might want to know what’s going on with my life, my next novel and StarShine Magazine.  I’ll be finishing up a series of vignettes as part of the “Dream Catchers” series, which will be available on Kindle.com this fall!  And I’m eager to get to work on “The Watch Dog”, which will be released in 2012.  As for StarShine – I’ll be posting interviews with the cast of “The Casserole Club” soon and hopefully, some other cool interviews soon.  Since country music will be so accessible to me now, I will be letting you guys know about some well-known and not so well known, but just as talented artists on the scene!

Thank you guys for all your support!!  Keep reading :)

Hugs, Kisses & Stars,

Sandy Lo