An Interview with Jason Arnold|Author of ‘A Beginner’s Guide To Wine’

Today I’ll be hosting author Jason Murray Arnold on my blog. His debut book, “A Beginner’s Guide To Wine” published in June 2020 is available at Amazon.com.

Jason Arnold 2

Me: What inspired you to start writing The Beginner’s Guide to Wine?

Jason: I think, more than anything, it had to do with the fact that while I was learning to appreciate wine, I just couldn’t find a simple guide to start. I had to learn everything the hard way, by getting out there and asking questions. Sure, there are courses on wine, but they aren’t very approachable to the beginner. Too often, they contain information that you can’t begin to grasp while just getting started. The language of the wine world can seem like an entirely different language at first. I read that there are thousands of words used to describe the taste of wine. That can be overwhelming to the beginner. So, I’ve tried to make this book the answer to that problem. How can you understand wine when you don’t have years of learning and lack the experience that trying a few hundred wines brings?

During my career, I’ve had the opportunity to travel and try so many different wines. But the one thing I’ve learned when discussing wine with the people I’ve met along the way is that many of them felt exactly how I did when I began. They find even the basics of wine difficult to understand. I mean with all the fancy words, it’s no wonder that’s true. With so many different varieties of wine and so many different wine growing regions, it can be confusing. They find it difficult to understand what makes one red so drastically different from another. So I tried to explain these things, as easily as I could. The book is my attempt at making the world of wine understandable to the average person. My hope is that by the end of the book, the reader will appreciate everything that goes into making fine wine.

Me: Can you share a snippet that isn’t in the blurb or excerpt?

Jason: Oh, what to share? It’s hard to share just one thing. But I think I’ll share a bit an excerpt from my chapter on American wine. It’s about wines made in Missouri, which is something that very few people, even in the wine world, know much about. But it’s an area that grows a variety of grapes that you, otherwise, rarely see made into wines, which makes it special.

“Missouri is perhaps most famous for producing wine in the corridor known as the Missouri Rhineland. This winegrowing region was founded by German immigrants in the early to mid-nineteenth century. By the 1880s, Missouri was the country’s top wine-growing region. It was the Napa Valley of its day.

Today the state benefits from Missouri’s long summers and thin rocky Ozark soil. Missouri is even known as the cave state for its many underground caverns. There, wineries often utilize the natural cellars. Missouri’s most prominent variety of wine is the state grape, the Norton. But it also produces plenty of sweet wine with native grapes, such as the Concord. Most vineyards also plant French-American hybrids, such as Vignoles and Chardonel.”

61fAlvNmDVLPurchase here: Amazon.com 

Me: When did you first realize you wanted to be a writer?

Jason: I don’t think I ever planned to be a writer. In my professional life, I’m an accountant. I have both a Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees in business. But, I’ve always been passionate about wine. It’s one of my favourite things in life. Wine is something that I appreciate like one would appreciate art. You can describe a particular wine in so many different ways. I suppose you could say each bottle is its own work of art. For me, writing this book was a labor of love. I wanted to share what I’ve learned with others.

Me: What is the most difficult part of your artistic process?

Jason: For me, most difficult part was deciding what information to include and what to exclude. Some things certainly seemed vital, but others more trivial. The Beginner’s Guide to Wine is supposed to be an introduction to wine, and if not for having an editor to reign me back in,  I could have gone on and on about all the finer details and nuances of winemaking. The final work, I hope, provides enough information to answer all questions a newbie would have without overreaching. One of the motivations for writing this book is to encourage the reader explore wine even further. I don’t want them to stop here.

Me: What is the most surprising thing you discovered while writing your book?

Jason: When I began this book, I had a pretty good grasp of the major wine grapes and the regions. I could describe the difference between all of them. But I really didn’t know a lot about the history of wine. That took research. From the famous story of Jesus turning water into wine, I knew that wine was around at least as early as Rome. But, I discovered, that it actually goes back thousands of years before that. That surprised me.

Me: Who is your favourite author and why?

Jason: I’d have to say my favourite author was Francis Scott Fizgerald. Not because he struggled with alcoholism, writing about a probation era in The Great Gatsby, but because of his incredible depictions of the Jazz Age. His work always seemed to me like the work of a romantic and the themes of youth, despair, and age resonate with us all. He’s a classic American author that deserves all the acclaim he’s received.

Me: What books or authors have most influenced your own writing?

Jason: There is a 1971 book by Hugh Johnson and Jancis Robinson called The World Atlas of Wine. I’d say that it was one of the first essential works of literature on wine. They revised it last year and it contains some of the most descriptions of wine and the regions in which it has grown.

Me: Writing can be an emotionally draining and stressful pursuit. Any tips for aspiring writers?

Jason: Well, if you actually want to finish the book, you have to just sit down and write it. You have to keep writing it. Too many distractions and too much planning can both kill your ability to actually get anything done. Words have to hit paper or you’ll never finish. But, I think that the most important thing is to write about something you’re interested in. If you’re not passionate about what you’re writing, it’ll be hard to find the motivation to finish.

Me: If you had to describe yourself in three words, what would they be?

Jason: Just three words? Methodical, meticulous, and sophisticated.

Me: Are you working on anything at the present you would like to share with your readers about?

Jason: Well, I’m going to start blogging about wine. Before this book, I really didn’t write much. But now, I don’t want to stop. I want to continue sharing knowledge about wine and diving deeper into specific topics. This book is just an introduction. Maybe I’ll write a book specific to Missouri wine. It’s an underrated wine region. And it’s the next obvious, move for me. I mean, that’s where I live and work. There are some great vineyards in my backyard.

You can contact Jason at jasonmurrayarnold@gmail.com or visit him at https://jasonmarnold.com/.

About the Book

71Ao7KAnS7L

This short book will serve as a guide to help you understand the basic types of wine and common terminology so that you can go from sounding like a beginner to a more refined individual. It will not make you an expert and certainly not an oenophile. That is something that requires years of tasting and practice. Yet, even the experts had to start somewhere. In this book, we will start with the basics, including the answer to that oh so important question, “what is wine?”

The beginner’s guide to wine is available in paperback and Kindle editions from Amazon.com

 

 

About the Author

author

Jason Arnold is a wine connoisseur, art collector, and accountant. A frequent traveler, he can be found scuba diving, skiing, and exploring the great outdoors while in search of finest wines. He enjoys pairing unique wines with exotic cuisine and finds the vine to one God’s gifts to humanity.

Gut healthy by CW Piper|Book review

31gp088wnzL

Title: Gut Healthy

Author: CW Piper

Pages: 45

Genre: Health and Nutrition

 

They say, Health is wealth and it is absolutely true considering our current worldwide scenario. In these days of self-isolation and home quarantine, we should think more about our health. Developing a good immune system is an absolute necessity for all humans now. We should gain more knowledge about the human body for this. For that, Gut healthy is a good book to know more about our own body.

The author explains all the basic and advanced knowledge about our body in simple and easy to understand terms. It is written as simple as that anybody who is interested to know more about the human body can understand everything in this book easily.

When I saw the title, Gut healthy, I thought that it will only talk about our gut. But he begins with gut and gradually moves to all other sections of general wellbeing. It is quite interesting to know about what is happening inside our system. From the introduction of the book itself, he clarifies that the gut is not an unimportant part of our body as we think. The gut produces more than 20 important hormones that control our appetite to mood swings. The gut microbiome is the single most important thing which maintains the health of skin, brain, weight, ability to absorb nutrients and more. By reading the introduction of this book itself, we can understand that gaining more knowledge about our gut is essential to improve our health.

After the introduction, the author unravels everything about the gut in a systematic manner. First, he introduces digestion in general and then the role of the microbiome. After he explains all the facts about a healthy gut and its abnormalities. After giving a basic knowledge about the gut he then concentrates on the diet that we can adopt for improving our gut microbiome. It includes what to include and what not. After that, he gives a brief idea about the diseases we may encounter due to an unhealthy gut too. This is an amazing guide for a beginner to understand and modify their system for better health and lives.

The standout in this book is indeed the writing style. A structured, well crafted with accurate information conveyed through simple language. This is a must-read for all because it deals with the single most important thing in our life, health. The valuable information provided in the book will help every reader to understand and modify their gut microbiome for better health.

Rating:5/5

 

 

 

[Book Tour] The Sanctity of Sloth by Greta Boris

About the Book

Title: The Sanctity of Sloth

Author: Greta Boris

Genre: Suspense, Mystery

Series: The Seven Deadly Sins

There’s one thing more dangerous than testifying to a crime—staying silent.
Locked in the ruins of a California Mission, Abby Travers watches helplessly as a girl dies outside her window. As she struggles between her moral obligation to come forward as a witness, and her commitment to a Medieval religious practice that requires her to retreat from the world, the situation spins out of control.
Abby’s hesitation starts a series of catastrophes. She finds herself at the center of a deadly cover up where every minute counts and indecision could be fatal. She questions all her beliefs and everyone she knows becomes suspect. To save herself and those she loves, she must break free from her self-imposed prisons of stone and fear.
The Sanctity of Sloth is a taut, psychological thriller that answers the question: What happens when a good woman does nothing? Fans of Paula Hawkins and A.J. Finn will enjoy this third book in Greta Boris’s Seven Deadly Sins Series.

Purchase from Amazon

Excerpt 

The irony of her position struck her. She had willingly shut herself into a room with much the same dimensions as this one. It had only one small window, like this one. It had no door, however. But even without a door, sheʹd had freedom. The anchorites of old willingly consigned themselves to a cell which would eventually become their grave. They had a funeral service before they entered. Yet, they were freer than Abby was now, because it was their choice.

Would this room become her grave?

Autonomy. Sheʹd never realized before how beautiful that word was. When one was stripped of the ability to rule themselves, to determine their own fate, didnʹt they cease to exist in some way?

Sunlight streaked the gray floor with gold. By its slant, she guessed it was at least 1:30. She still had one hour of freedom, one hour to be Abby. She wanted to experience every moment she had left. When the sun reached her and warmed her skin, that would signal the end of her time in this new anchorhold. But she couldnʹt bear to watch the minutes move across the floor. She closed her eyes.

Author Bio

Greta Boris was raised in Greenwich Village, New York by an opera singing, piano playing, voice coach and a magazine publisher. Her original life plan was to be a famous Broadway actor, singer, and dancer, but when she moved to Laguna Beach, California, she changed her plans due to the commute. Today she writes to inspire, entertain, motivate, and so she can afford nice wine.

Links

Facebook Author Page

Twitter

Website

Goodreads

Amazon Author Page