Category Archives: interviews

Interview with Author Eleni Traganas

Concert pianist, author, visual artist and composer Eleni Traganas’ award-winning activities have been listed in Who’s Who in America©, Who’s Who in the World©, and other biographical publications. Ms. Traganas holds degrees from The Juilliard School, with postgraduate studies in Essen, Germany, and Switzerland’s Lucerne Conservatory. Her deep affinity for the Romantic repertoire has led to innumerable appearances and lectures in Carnegie Hall, New York’s Alice Tully Hall, Town Hall, London’s Wigmore Hall, Berlin, Athens, and many of the major music capitals of Europe, where she also performed under the aegis of the U.S. State Department. She is a prize-winner of the Palma D’Oro International Piano Competition in Italy, has been a guest soloist at several international music festivals and featured soloist with The Israel Symphony, the Athens State Orchestra, the Municipal Concerts Orchestra, the American Symphony Orchestra, and other ensembles. She has recorded for EMI records, West German Broadcasting Co.RAI-Italy, National Radio & Television of Greece, WQXR, SiriusXM, among others. Author of the debut novel Twelfth House and Shaded Pergola, a collection of short poetry and haiku with original illustrationsEleni Traganas has published in The Society of Classical Poets, The San Antonio ReviewThe Brussels Review, The Penwood Review, Amethyst Review, and over a hundred other literary magazines. She has held over 40 nationally-curated exhibitions of her artwork and is the founder/director of the NYC-based literary forum Woodside Writers.

Bio graciously provided by Eleni Traganas.

You can find out more at www.elenitraganas.com.


  • You are a pianist, composer, author, and poet. Obviously, you have a deeply ingrained streak of creativity. Is there someplace in your mind that these intersect? Is there some point of understanding or perspective that enables you to understand all of these arts? Is there a key or a common factor that enables you to understand each of these individually?

Phil, you omitted visual artist, in addition! I have held many nationally-curated exhibitions in the past. And it is precisely the visual aspect of self-expression that has the strongest hold over my imagination. This all ties in with the concept of synesthesia—or, in my case—chromesthesia, an unusual state of perception that seamlessly intertwines all sensory input into a unified and organic whole. In other words, through conceptual-auditory synesthesia, I don’t hear notes, for instance, when I am playing an instrument. I see sound, or swathes of sound that reverberate to specific colors. Like the key of A major, for example: I ‘hear’ a pinkish orange wash of tones that exude a strangely sugary, anodyne underlying taste. I also have a form of graphene-synesthesia in which numbers assume a dedicated color profile reflecting a personal vibratory association. For me, a number ‘2’ is soft ochre or pale yellow in essence, a number ‘7’ is a steel green in hue. From the limited statistics available on this specialized subject, approximately 1-2% of the general population have been born with this ‘neurodivergent’ trait, most always evidenced from early childhood. I explored this phenomenon briefly in my story Paint By Numbers https://masticadoresusa.wordpress.com/2025/02/05/paint-by-numbers-by-e-c-traganas/.  It never occurred to me that this was an uncommon ‘condition’, and it has simply formed the sensory backdrop as to how I process and express emotional perceptions. 

  • What is your writing process? Any favorite places to write? Any interesting quirks, traditions, or rituals you may have? How many times might you revise something before being satisfied with it? Besides you, does anyone else edit your work? 

Often, I ask members of my Woodside Writers forum what it is they love about writing. My own response has always been that it is the only creative activity I can effectively pursue while reclining in bed in the dark! Tying in with the aspect of chromesthesia, I require an absolute minimum of external sensory input and distraction in order to write: no screen time, no glaring monitors, no background music, no keyboard clicking away noisily impeding the tactile flow of nascent thought transferring itself from mental image to twitching pencil point. Scraps of paper are always at hand, especially at the ready on my nightstand when my mind often erupts spontaneously in subconscious ideas in the dead of night. I simply close my eyes, let my pencil scratch itself over a clean white sheet of paper—and voilá, a poem births itself out of nowhere. Then, the critical sense takes over in broad daylight: painstaking revisions, weighing the effectiveness of internal pulse, line breaks, word substitutions—agonizing editorial scrutiny and objective cold-blooded evaluation. This process may take days, even years, and sometimes I will shelve a work for decades before returning to it, airing it out, refining it before finally sending it off for publication. Every now and then, I am unable to retouch a single line of a poem as everything just seems to fall effortlessly into place at the first pass, chiseled into completion somehow from within. Strangely, those are the poems most often accepted by editors. Others, the mummified, over-processed poems, seem to pose a greater challenge when pairing them with fitting publication platforms. I rely on my internal objective analysis and review when editing: Beta readers can be of little use if you are striving towards an original voice in your stylistic goals. They can, in fact, be a detriment. Focus intensely, listen to your own voice and edit savagely and relentlessly. 

  • If you have an idea or emotion that you want to express, do you find that it might be expressed better via one art form than another? For example, if you hit upon an idea, and you have to decide whether you could express it better by writing a sonata versus expressing it in a poem or short story?

In all creative forms, you must have a compelling reason to break the silence, or interrupt the flow of time. For me, music has always functioned on its own transcendent plane, with the most immediate, soul-wrenching effect of all the arts on the body’s nervous system and neuronal processes. As Schopenhauer explains, music is the most sublime and significant of all art forms ‘capable of channeling a higher universal truth’. Expose a plant to a week’s worth of Mozart or Bach and it will flourish exponentially in lush and healthy foliage, almost as if in gratitude. Read short stories to it, or flash some paintings in its presence, and the effect might be positive in some indirect way, but will most likely be negligible in the long run. The rewards of performing music on stage are indescribable: when all the stars are in alignment, one becomes a direct arbiter, a transmitter tapping in to a profound cosmic source, acting as a medium or middle-man, so to speak. The nifty thing is, though, that as a writer, one has the tools at one’s disposal to describe in words what the process of composition involves, what the visual artist sees or feels. Through writing, one can channel the composer’s mind and merge with his psyche, one can become an artist like Albrecht Dürer or C. D. Friedrich (my favorite painters, by the way) and explore their creative process through intense focus, allowing their personas to communicate directly to you through your writing. Alright, this hearkens back to my previous remark. The most direct mode of self-expression in my case is the easiest: one which involves simply grabbing a pencil and a scrap of paper and going at it—even while reclining in the dark! 

  • Did you have a professor at Juilliard (or at any school for that matter) from whom you learned lessons that you have valued throughout your life?

I will always remember one particular instance involving my mentor Paul Badura-Skoda (1927-2019), the pre-eminent Mozart specialist active in the Viennese performance scene. We were seated at dinner in a posh restaurant in Nuremberg after a performance, and when the waiter placed a platter of the famous Nürnberger Bratwürstchen before him, he joyously clapped his hands, burst out in a snaggletoothed smile, rolled his eyes heavenwards and exclaimed, ‘Oh, sausages! I am such a lucky man!’—just like that, nodding in excitement with his tuxedo and stiff white tie. It was an artless proclamation of endless delight in the simplest of everyday things. And that is the message I took away that evening: that the most seemingly insignificant things can have the greatest impact on our happiness and overall state of being, something I try and incorporate into my writing at all times. I also credit many of my teachers at Juilliard and elsewhere for generously giving of their time, eschewing any financial recompense in return, and that ethos of selflessly assisting others has always remained with me as a guidepost in life: Give freely with no worldly expectation. 

  • Do you ever think that you just want to quit everything and take up a job with more regular hours like teaching or maybe being a consultant to arts organizations or museums?

Quit? Unthinkable. Unimaginable. Does a poet wish to muffle their mouth or cut out their tongue? Does an artist willingly agree to blindfold their eyes? Does a lark aspire to bury its voice and chain itself to a land-locked sand dune? Being an artist implies endless, eternal freedom.

  •  When are you thinking of retiring, if ever? What would you do in retirement?

Retire? Unthinkable. Unimaginable. Why would I ever contemplate putting an end to all the joyful pursuits I am now engaged in? Depending on one’s point of view, if having fun and enjoying oneself is the definition of retirement, I probably have been ‘retired’ most of my life!

  • From what I can see, you spent many years in music before you decided to write a novel. What motivated you to write a novel? What were the challenges of writing a novel? What are the personal rewards? Do you plan on writing any more novels or books of poetry? Are any coming out within the next few years? What should we watch for?

Writing for me has always gone hand-in-hand with performing. I have kept extensive notebooks and journals for as long as I can remember, with volumes of teen-aged poetry and stories stashed away in forgotten corners of my desk drawers. Unfortunately, performance preparation involves constant practice without let-up. I recall periods in my life during which I would immerse myself in 7-8 hours of intensive daily rehearsal. That left little time to plan & plot an extended narrative. The time eventually arrived, though, allowing me to plunge into the necessary and exhaustive work, and Twelfth House was birthed. Yes, I do have plans…but have learned to exercise restraint and to never divulge one’s endeavors in advance. To do so always seems to result in a dissipation of momentum.

  • What first interested you about music and when was that?

I am proud to say that my background is non-artistic, and that afforded the opportunity to develop and discover myself ‘sui generis’ as it were without parental pressure and undue influence. I have vivid memories of a moment long ago when I was about three years old. My parents brought me to an old stone-edificed church in the Bronx where we were living at the time. It was a reconverted Protestant building which now served our family’s Eastern Orthodox community. I was sitting in the front pew and gasped with something akin to recognition when I noticed a facade of glimmering organ pipes near the altar. I can’t describe the sensation that came over me, but I do know I fell into some kind of trance state and burst out spontaneously in tears! Afterwards, my parents took me down to the adjoining parsonage. My eyes were immediately drawn to an imposing upright piano in a corner of the room. I ran up to it, and, mesmerized by the black and white keys, started coaxing soft melodies from the keyboard. I was enchanted by the magical sounds! Soon, the priest came up and started humming some tunes to me and it seemed like the easiest thing for me to just play them back to him. To be seated in front of that piano was the most natural thing in the world for me then, something I seemed to have instantly recognized from long, long ago. Soon afterwards, my parents bought me a toy 32-note piano and I remember spending hours and hours improvising on it, exploring tones and sound combinations until the poor instrument finally fell apart! It would be years later, however, when I would eventually get my own ‘real’ piano and begin lessons. At the age of eleven, I was hired for my first job as church organist. And since then, throughout the decades, the high point of my week continues to be the hours spent up in the organ loft playing for Sunday morning church services. 

  • Who do you read? Who’s your favorite author and why? Who do you consider your greatest influences in writing, or music, or art?

I love Rainer Maria Rilke, especially in German, as I believe his unique melodiousness cannot be adequately translated. My admiration for him prompted a pilgrimage to his final retreat in Castle Muzot, Switzerland, where the caretaker kindly let me spend an afternoon alone at the desk where he composed The Duino Elegies. I do admire T. S. Eliot, although he seems to be in and out of favor as the wayward winds blow. I also remember reading the first chapter of Wuthering Heights as a twelve-year-old and feeling the force of the windswept moors completely overwhelm my imagination. That experience led to another pilgrimage up in Yorkshire to visit the Brontë Parsonage. I am intrigued by Tang Dynasty poetry, especially that of Wang Wei, hold Bashō and the Japanese poets in high esteem; I have devoured all the world classics—Russian, French, Greek, German, Icelandic, etc.—and remain an avid bibliophage to this day. I love reading and writing historical fiction, and admire well-researched contemporary works: the Egyptian-inspired novels of Pauline Gedge, Ken Follett’s Kingsbridge series, most novels by Anya Seton, everything (well-researched or not) of Philippa Gregory’s, Sharon Kay Penman, Rosemary Sutcliff, Pearl S. Buck, to name a few, and I retain a soft spot for the Saxon Tale series of Bernard Cornwell. But above all, J. S. Bach forever remains my guiding light and keeper of the keys to my soul.

  • Of all your accomplishments, which one(s) do you consider your greatest?

Here, I must circle back to the ethos of selfless giving. Returning the love I felt from my parents during my childhood, and especially being a caregiver to my mother throughout her health challenges, watching over her devotedly at home as she gradually faded and slipped into death shall remain the most sacred and fulfilling privilege of my life’s journey.

  • Making a living in the arts is no doubt demanding. What keeps you going? What keeps you motivated? What are the rewards that motivate you to keep pressing on?

Being up on stage is a thrill like no other: time is suspended, you are living intensely in the moment, in a reality that unfolds within its own intrinsic laws. Play Chopin and you ‘speak’ to your listeners in an emotionally rich language of universal balance. Play the strange music of Russian mystic Alexander Scriabin and you immerse your audience in a mesmerizing and hypnotic world of vibrant colors and celestial sonorities. And when you bring them back to earth at the end of a recital and they show their appreciation with applause, perhaps a standing ovation, and occasionally with a tear of gratitude in their eyes, you have most definitely reaped your rewards.


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Photo provided by Eleni Traganas

Interview with Sarah Das Gupta, Poet

Sarah Das Gupta is a poet who has been published several times in both Rural Fiction Magazine and in The Chamber Magazine (both published by Slattery Publishing). Recently, I sent several questions to her for an interview. Below her published works in RFM and The Chamber (following) are the questions I sent and then her responses.

Poems Published in The Chamber and in Rural Fiction Magazine
Questions

Q: Correct me if I am wrong, but I have seen in a couple of bio notes for other magazines that you are about 83 years old. So you were born about 1943 and graduated college around 1965 (maybe?). Then I take it you taught for sixty years, meaning you retired about 2003.  That period from about 1965 to the present day (assuming you read a lot during that timeframe) was an interesting one for the evolution of literature. Have you seen an overarching trend or tendency in the literature of the English-speaking world during that timeframe?  Does anything about this period fascinate or disappoint you?  What genres or styles of literature from then or from other periods do you enjoy most?

Q: You have lived in India and Tanzania per your bio notes. Have you read much of the literature of either one or from any other nation(s)?  

Q: Did you live in rural areas while in India and Tanzania?  What did you enjoy most and what did you find most challenging about living in each? Do you find living there peaceful, idyllic, chaotic, frightening, or what?

Q: While in Tanzania, did you live near Kilimanjaro or the Serengeti plain? These are probably the two most famous landmarks our readers will recognize. What do you treasure or dislike most about living in India?

Q: You taught English in Kolkata and Tanzania.  Did you primarily teach grammar and conversation or did you also teach literature? Were you employed by an organization or university?   What were the joys and challenges of teaching in these two nations?

Q: Did you learn Bengali or Swahili while living abroad? 

Q: What is your writing process? What is a typical day for you as a writer?

Q: How do you come up with ideas for stories or poems? Do you sit and try to think up things or search your memories for something to write about? Or does something trigger a memory (like in A Remembrance of Things Past/In Search of Lost Time by Marcel Proust) or an idea and then you write it down quickly? 

Q: Are you a disciplined writer or one that basically flows with the stream of consciousness or somewhere in between?

Q: Do you have any works soon to be published that RFM’s readers should watch for and where they might find them? Are you giving any talks, presentations, or lectures?

Responses
  1. Early Background: I was born in 1942 in the middle of World War 11. My father was in command of a team of gunners on the cruiser, HMS Orion.

I saw little of him in the first three years of my life. My maternal grandparents lived near Biggin Hill, the Royal Airforce Air Base from which the Battle of Britain was fought. Apparently, my mother watched

with me in her arms as German aircraft come in to bomb London and then flew over the house, dropping untargeted bombs, to save fuel on the return route. 

My godfather was drowned off the Irish coast when his cruiser was tragically cut in half by the liner, The Queen Mary, carrying American troops to Glasgow. Nobody ever talked about him.

I never heard my father talk of the war. In fact, only last year, I discovered his ship, The Orion, was one of two British ships which won the most battle honours in the War.

We lived at the highest point of the North Downs. Our house was a menagerie first and foremost. We kept over thirty horses (some ours, some at livery), every type of poultry, five or six dogs, farm cats and Burmese cats. The garage never housed a car but all the injured wildlife which the locals brought to my father. When you opened the garage door, a falcon would fly at you or a snake slither over your feet! I have remained a great lover of animals all my life.

  1. University: 

When I arrived aged 18, at London University, I think it was the first time I had been to central London. I studied medieval and modern history, a subject I had always enjoyed at school. Here I first met a young Indian student whom I was later to marry.

3.  Trends in Literature

 I became an English and History teacher after graduation and teacher        training. Certainly, in the UK at least, I taught Literature and in the course of my work I covered the range of the subject from Chaucer to Joyce. I have always particularly enjoyed teaching and reading poetry. As I only retired at eighty,  my opportunity for developing other interests and hobbies has been limited. Certainly, from the 1960’s, Western literature has changed in style, content and authorship. Women have become increasingly important, voices like Maya Angelou and Toni Morrison are not only women’s voices but also Black voices too. In fact, in the post-colonial era the number of Black and ethnic minority writers has increased prodigiously. This perhaps has been most evident in ex- British colonies, specially in India, the Caribbean and African nations like Nigeria. Many of these nations have not only written about colonisation but also engaged with Indian or African cultures more deeply, for example, in novels like ‘A Suitable Boy’ by Vikram Seth. In much of Europe and North America the voices of recent immigrants have forced countries to look at themselves in a less favourable light as in ‘White Teeth’ by Zadie Smith.

One subject I feel less at home with because perhaps of my age, is that of gender. When I submitted an article for an American magazine, I had to consult the dictionary and the internet to find how to classify myself. I am sorry to admit, I have now forgotten the correct term. Positive discrimination seems to me to be in danger of alienating the majority of the population from the very causes it is trying to promote. That being said, there is no doubt that the causes remain valid and very much worthy fighting for. Therein lies the dilemma.

Not only the ethnicity of authors has widened but also the socio-economic class. Writers from working class backgrounds have had opportunities to be published and have had considerable success which is certainly to be welcomed.

Certainly, the development of communications and technology have challenged the printed word. A whole new band of critics has found a voice on twitter/X, Facebook/ Instagram etc. Writers are expected to maintain a presence on these platforms and face criticism, often from anonymous voices who are without any knowledge or qualification. Everyone appears to have a right to express a view on any subject.

  1. Living Abroad

 After my graduation, I married and went to live in Kolkata, West Bengal, India where my husband worked as a journalist on ‘The Statesman’, the main English language newspaper at the time. I taught in one of the main girls’ schools in the city. We had two daughters who were able to attend this school from the age of three as it had a Nursery department. 

I taught English language/ literature and all the staff spoke fluent English, as did my husband. This meant I did not learn Bengali, apart from day to day essential phrases. My husband was a great admirer of the songs, poetry and writing of Rabindranath Tagore one of the major figures in the Bengal Renaissance of the mid- nineteenth and early twentieth century. Tagore was a true polymath: poet, short story writer, song writer, social reformer, philosopher, essayist, educationist, artist and the first non- European to win the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1913. I read many of his poems in translation which never quite captures the lyrical beauty of the original. He died in 1941 so never lived to see India’s independence.

I greatly enjoyed teaching in Loreto House, a school for girls run by an order of Irish nuns which Mother Theresa belonged to, before founding the Missionaries of Charity.   At the time, many sisters were from the Irish Republic but on a recent visit, I found most of the Sisters were from South India. It was a great school to teach in where the majority of students were Hindus, a minority were Moslem and a small number of Anglo-Indians, Christians. The academic standard was high, behaviour, exemplary and students highly motivated. English Literature was widely covered, also Bengali, Hindi and Sanskrit. We read and performed a number of Shakespeare plays: ‘The Merchant of Venice’, ‘A Midsummer Night’s Dream,’ ‘Julius Caesar’ and a full performance of ‘Macbeth’. In sixty years of teaching, I have never worked with such talented and responsive students and such a friendly and devoted staff. Nearly half a century later, I am still in touch with most of my Loreto students!

Most of my memories of Kolkata are positive, especially my work. Of course, as anywhere, you have problems day to day. A major crisis arose when our ground floor flat flooded, and we had to move to the roof! It was also rather frightening when I had to find my way alone in a blackout to the hospital where my second daughter was born, only a few minutes after I arrived. This was during the war between Bangladesh and Pakistan when my husband was away reporting. Then there was the crisis when my husband’s elderly aunt, threw all our beautiful clay water jars out on the pavement because the bathroom cleaner, from the lowest class in Hindu society, had walked past the ewers in the hallway.

Later in my career after I returned to the UK following my husband’s death. I taught for a short time in Tanzania. This was a very different situation from Kolkata. The children were younger and the emphasis was on language and oral English. Many children came from poor families of agricultural workers. Often, they walked many kilometres a day to and from school. In some cases, they shared a pair of shoes so were not able to attend every day. In one school, the classroom overlooked the Rift Valley. There was an unforgettable view of thousands of bright pink flamingos standing along the river bank. Here, rather than use English text books, I used local African legends or stories which the children dramatized. They all had a remarkable sense of rhythm and great singing voices. They were lively and dedicated to mastering English. I remember, one day, I came back from lunch to see the older children had organised the youngsters into class groups and they were practising the songs I had taught them. When I asked,’ Why?’, they said, ‘So they will remember and sing them perfectly!’ I wondered if you’d ever find this enthusiasm in Europe or the US? 

One of my greatest experiences was climbing half-way up Kilimanjaro, the  highest peak in Africa. The climb to the summit was a little too much, so I kept to the limited option. I had an outstanding guide who suggested I should extend his English vocabulary and I would learn basic Swahili! His English was already reasonably fluent and he definitely got most out of our agreement. I explained to him I was a geriatric and had to move slowly. He immediately repeated ‘geriatric’ until he had mastered the word. In return he advised me to go ‘slowly’, ‘polepole’ in Swahili. That evening he came to the hostel and left  a red and white t-shirt for me with the slogan written across the front!

I also stayed in a hotel in Tanzania which looked over a water-hole. At night we saw elephants, buffalo, giraffes and monkeys come to drink. On one trip into a forest, a herd of elephants with young calves passed across the track. The driver whispered to us to ‘be quiet’; he later explained there were two huge bulls in the group and they were likely to attack when calves were in the herd.

  1. Writing

I started writing two years ago after an accident. Unfortunately, this left me only able to walk a few metres without help. My elder daughter, an established writer, tossed me a booklet with a list of writing competitions with the throwaway comment, ‘You’re never too old!’ I was in a geriatric ward where most of the patients suffered from dementia. I started writing at night as a distraction from the screaming, crying and general disturbance in the ward.  My first short story, was set in the early nineteenth century, the age of stage coaches. I started researching the subject and suddenly the uproar went unnoticed. I then started writing poetry, my favourite literary form. I will always be grateful to an East African magazine, ‘The Flying Dodo’ sadly now defunct, for giving me my first chance! 

I start writing most days at ten am and, apart from short breaks, go on to ten or eleven at night. I now write poetry, fiction, flash fiction, creative non-fiction, essays and expanded articles on historical subjects. These have been published in over twenty different countries and in three hundred magazines and anthologies. I have become interested in genres like horror which I had never previously read. I have been reading earlier writers like Lovecraft and Dennis Wheatley and re-reading ‘Dracula’. As, at the moment, I write for many different magazines, the subjects/themes are not usually chosen by me. I have recently written stories/ articles on beavers, surviving in geriatric wards, zombies, time travel, cats, tea gardens, Bay of Bengal, piers, King’s College Cambridge, murder of Archduke Rudolf, the Sun Temple at Konark, Edgar Allan Poe to name but a few, as they say. 

As you can imagine, inspiration comes in many ways. Poems usually come through a line or single word which suddenly goes round and round in my head, or I think of a particular form like the Villanelle or Triolet. In regard to short stories, often an event or experience sparks ideas. Yesterday we were having dinner when my daughter produced a key and gave it to my grandson. She had accidently dropped it down the lift- shaft and a maintenance man had retrieved it. I immediately said, ‘That’s a good beginning for a short story. Suppose it’s a key to a different flat or a cupboard or ?’ Of course, at my age memory plays a major role. I can’t remember phone numbers or where I left my glasses but I can re-call very small details about places, events and people

For example, I was writing the other day about ‘chicken’ and I could picture the mud and foot prints around the duck pond at home seventy years ago, in precise appearance and colour. In many cases I need to read around the subject. I enjoy researching but the only problem is, I become too involved and finish up reading a whole book.

I still have many unrealised ambitions as far as writing is concerned. I wish I had started earlier. At the moment my main hopes are to have a chapbook of horror poems published and to publish a series of short stories about a cat which speaks fluent French and can fly, no I haven’t been drinking, I’m a teetotaller. 

Favourite poets:  Tennyson   T.S. Eliot    Sylvia Plath

Favourite novels: ‘The Mayor of Casterbridge’   Thomas Hardy

                                  ‘Emma’     Jane Austen

                                   ‘Beloved’    Toni Morrison

Drama:                      Shakespeare ‘The Tempest’

                                   ‘A Street Car Named Desire’ Tennessee Williams

                                    ‘Long Day’s Journey into Night’   Eugene O’Neill

X/twitter @SarahDasGu42181


Thank you, Sarah, for being a dedicated follower of and contributor to both The Chamber Magazine and Rural Fiction Magazine.


If you would like to be part of the Rural Fiction Magazine family, follow this link to the submissions guidelines.

Please share this story to give it maximum distribution. Exposure is our authors’ only pay. You can also help our contributors gain exposure by back linking to them and to RFM’s homepage.

Financial donations through either our GoFundMe or Buy Me a Coffee accounts will help expand our global reach by paying for advertising, more advanced WordPress plans, and expansion into more extensive Content Delivery Networks.