Fellow Forum member Tim Champlin--a frequent fixture at Mark Twain conferences--was recently interviewed on WTUC, Chattanooga's NPR station. Tim's a prolific author of Western novels, several of which use Sam Clemens as a character. One of his novels, /Tom Sawyer and the Ghosts of Summer/, is a time-travel story that opens in 1950 and takes its youthful protagonists back to 1848 Hannibal, where they meet Sam Clemens, Tom Sawyer, and Huck Finn. Kevin Mac Donnell reviewed that book for the Forum in 2010 (http://www.twainweb.net/reviews/Champlin2.html). Incidentally, Tim is currently looking for a publisher for his novel about the lost voice recordings of Mark Twain. Tim's NPR review focuses on /_Ghosts of Summer_;/ another novel titled /_Treasure of the Templars_, /whose Kindle edition is currently attracting a lot of attention on Amazon.com; and _Louis L'Amour's Wild West_, his recently completed nonfiction book about fellow Western writer Louis L'Amour. However, it's a wide-ranging interview that reveals a lot about how Tim got into writing and how he works. Those of you who know Tim or who are interested in how novelists work will find the interview fascinating. You can listen to it at http://wutc.org/post/book-news-treasure-thrilling-westerns-tim-champlin. <http://wutc.org/post/book-news-treasure-thrilling-westerns-tim-champlin> Kent Rasmussen p.s. If you'd care to sample one of Tim's novels, you can do no better than read _Cold Cache_, whose intrepid protagonist has described by K. Patrick Ober as one of the great heroic figures in modern literature And that man (Ober, not the protagonist) knows what he's talking about. He's a doctor (a real one, not one of those piled-higher-and-deeper types).