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Author Update 2025: Patricia Gable

After retiring from a 26-year teaching career, author Patricia Gable has published short stories for children, hundreds of articles for an educational website, and three middle-grade novels. The Right Discovery (November 2024) is the third book in her The Right Series. Look for the series on Barnes & Noble and the individual books on Amazon: The Right Address (book 1), The Right Choice (Book 2), and The Right Discovery (Book 3). You’ll find Patricia on her website PatriciaGable.com, and for more about her work, read her 2022 and 2023 SWW interviews.


Are you happy with how the plot and characters have developed in The Right Series?
The characters have become friends to me. That may sound silly, but I’m sure authors understand. I want young readers to grasp good traits from these characters. The friendships have evolved since the first book. They have fun and look out for each other. Without the parents around at the beginning of book three, they need to think for themselves.

How did you come up with the plot in this book: a dangerous blizzard…five friends trapped in a large house without parents?
School has been cancelled due to the snow, but the blizzard progressed as the day went on. The parents went to work early. Each parent was helping the small town in a variety of ways. One mom was a nurse, another fixing the school furnace, others checking in on the elderly and lastly the manager of the diner kept the hot coffee and breakfast ready for the city workers. The children were dropped off at the big house, so they could be together, be safe, and have fun while the parents worked.

Tell us more about the characters. Are Annie, Willie, Emma, and Christopher (introduced in books one and two) the focus of The Right Discovery? Any new characters readers should know about?
The characters were gradually added in the first two books. Annie and Willie were the main characters in The Right Address. Then they met Emma and her mother. In book two, The Right Choice, they meet Chris and Kellen. In The Right Discovery, Annie, Emma, Chris and Kellen are in tenth grade and Willie, funny and daring, is in second grade. He tags along. A guardian angel follows Christopher to protect him and the town.

When looking for inspiration for your works, what are the two or three things that mostly motivate you to write?
As a former teacher, I always tried to celebrate good qualities in all my students. Humor was added to my teaching, because it kept their attention. Even then, I was writing in my head. I didn’t want to write science fiction or evil. I wanted the characters to have fun and do good things.

As an author, do you plan out the whole written work (and accompanying plot and story line) in advance, or is yours a more spontaneous and flowing style?
To write a book or short story, I have a few notes to begin, but I usually just start typing. The first draft might be nothing like the final story. I always keep a note pad or a scrap of paper close by to capture the ideas in my head.

What have been some of the challenges facing you as a writer, in this third middle-grade book?
In the third book I wanted it to be better. So, I added drawings, character summaries in case the reader hadn’t read the first two books, an active guardian angel, and discussion questions.

How did you come up with the title? Was it hard checking to see if the title had already been used in another publication?
The first book, The Right Address, was based on a story I wrote in a contest in 2006. I won honorable mention. The story “haunted” me for years. So, in 2022, I made the short story into a book. I didn’t even think about changing the title. After it was published, I found out that there were at least twelve books with the same title. Not very smart.

Who are some of your greatest mentors in writing? People who have either helped you or inspired you on your writing path?
My dad was my first mentor. He wrote poetry, long letters, and editorials. He encouraged me to always learn new words. Along the way, I enjoyed great children’s writers. When I discovered author Tomie dePaola had converted a barn into a studio to write and paint, it hit me. I wanted that, too. So, I retired from teaching. But sadly, I didn’t get a barn.

Do you collaborate with other middle-grade authors?
A few years ago, I enrolled in an online writing class. There were three students. My sister, who lives in Ohio, Diane who lives in England, and me in Arizona. We became great writing buddies. We meet on Zoom every two weeks to discuss writing.

What writing projects are you working on now?
My next endeavor focuses on the guardian angel. It won’t be linked to The Right Series.


Interviewer Christina Sultan is a former Albuquerque and Santa Fe, New Mexico resident who joined SouthWest Writers in 2022. A graduate of the English literature program at McGill University, Montreal, she has been an avid reader and writer of literary criticism all her life. She interned as a journalist at United Press International before working at the Whistler Question Newspaper and Whistler Magazine. She then went on to obtain a master’s degree in business in California. She was named to Who’s Who U.S.A. in 2007 and devotes much of her time to working in the arts, investments, and the humanities.




2024 New Releases for SWW Authors #6

Daniel Pedrick, Roger Floyd, Patricia Gable, Thelma A. Giomi, and Rosalie Rayburn are just a few examples of the genre-diverse membership of SouthWest Writers (SWW). Their releases couldn’t fit in the 2024 interview schedule, but look for 2025 interviews or updates for some of these authors.

A list of interviewed SWW authors with 2024 releases is included at the end of this post.


Liv’s Story: An Iowa Girl’s Rebellion (June 2024) by Daniel Pedrick. Liv grew up in Elk Horn, Iowa in an era filled with racial prejudices and limiting ideas about women’s roles in society. But she struck out on her own early in life, crossing barriers and diving without reservation into activities considered dangerous for young ladies. Racism in 1950s and 1960s America, middle-class hypocrisy, the plight of unwed mothers and the suffering of the mentally ill sculpt her deeply. Her connection to British Honduras (later known as Belize), and her wedding to a kind, older English chap enable her to find happiness. Korean War chaos, Japanese pearl diving, Cuban underwater follies, and cave diving in Belize are just some of the adventures found in this novel.

You’ll find Dan on rmkpublications.com and Liv’s Story on Amazon.


Explorer (Part I of the Anthanian Imperative Trilogy, August 2024) by Roger Floyd. The planet Anthanos is dying. Its orange-red sun is in the early stages of becoming a red giant. As the sun grows closer and closer, the planet grows hotter and hotter. Eventually the sun will go nova and destroy Anthanos. Scientists discover another planet to colonize outside their solar system – one with an appropriate temperature, plenty of water, an oxygen-rich atmosphere, and vast areas of solid surface to live on. So they send their best team to explore, but what those explorers find is much more than just the lovely blue planet they were expecting.

Look for Roger on his website RogerFloyd.com. Explorer is available on Amazon.


The Right Discovery (Book Three of The Right Series, November 2024) by Patricia Gable. In this middle grade novel, a dangerous blizzard stops everything in a small town. Five friends are trapped in a large house without their parents. They watch a movie and play games. When they play hide and seek, the danger begins! Where is Willie? Suddenly a large tree hits the house and knocks out the electricity. Will they be able to find him? A voice calls out from behind a basement wall, “Help me!” The adventure begins. History comes back to life. The friends work together and in the end the town benefits. And could there be a Guardian Angel involved?

Visit Patricia’s author pages on Amazon and SouthWestWriters.com.


Weaving Winter’s Magic (November 2024) by Thelma A. Giomi. This book of poetry is a meditative journey through the holiday season. The poems bring light and life into the long darkness of December. Her elegant words are both calming and revitalizing as she weaves spiritual magic through winter landscapes. Weaving Winter’s Magic has been called “true wisdom, true blessing, and true life” that “creates a profound message of hope—that we can create the world anew.”

You’ll find Thelma on ThelmaGiomi.com and her Amazon author page. Weaving Winter’s Magic is available here.


Windswept: A Digger Doyle Mystery (November 2024) by Rosalie Rayburn. Twenty-five years is a long time to keep a secret. But telling the truth can be deadly. Windswept, the third in the Digger Doyle series, finds intrepid reporter-turned-detective Elizabeth “Digger” Doyle reporting for a feisty little online newspaper. Digger brings her fierce energy and dedication to the struggling publication as she grapples with backdoor politics and the powerful oil and gas industry while investigating the death of a New Mexico State Representative who made powerful enemies with her push to ban new oil drilling.

Look for Rosalie on her website RosalieRayburn.com and blog, and on Facebook and her Amazon author page. Windswept is available here.


SWW Author Interviews: 2024 Releases

Tim Amsden
Love Letter to Ramah

Michael Backus
The Heart is Meat

Rachel Bate
Hatch Chile Willie

Irene Blea
Dragonfly

E. Joe Brown
A Cowboy’s Fortune (Kelly Can Saga Book 2)

Gency Brown
A Right Fine Life

Mary Lou Dobbs
Badass Old White Woman: How to Flip the Script on Aging

Lynn Ellen Doxon
The Moonlight Cavalry

Robert D. Kidera
Burn Scars

Kendra Loring
The Saga of Henri Standing Bear

William Murray
Worn Out Saddles and Boot Leather

Jeff Otis
Raptor Lands: The Story of the Harrowing Return of the Dinosaurs

Léonie Rosenstiel
Protecting Mama: Surviving the Legal Guardianship Swamp


KLWagoner150_2KL Wagoner loves creating worlds of fantasy and science fiction. Her current work in progress is The Last Bonekeeper fantasy trilogy and short stories in the same universe. A member of SouthWest Writers since 2006, Kat has worked as the organization’s secretary, newsletter editor, website manager, and author interview coordinator. Kat is also a veteran, a martial art student, and a grandmother. Visit her at klwagoner.com.




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