Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Welcome, Marie Rochelle

Coming Soon from Phaze Books:
Lucky Desire
Print Book
Features the following stories;

Lucky Charms Except:



“Do you think women like to be kissed fast and hard? Or slow and tenderly then let the build up happen?” Patrick asked moving him thumb so it stroked the side of her face. “I need to make sure I have this down perfectly.”
Jada didn’t understand what was going on with her. For some reason, Patrick’s nearness was making her head spin. She was feeling a wave of excitement coursing through her at the thought of his mouth of hers.
“I think most women like a mixture of both. We don’t want a guy who is going to shove his tongue instantly into our mouths. We like a little build up.”
“I believe I understand what you’re saying,” Patrick exclaimed as he leaned closer and gently nibbled at her bottom lip.
Jada felt a moan coming and tried to swallow it back down, but failed miserably. She couldn’t believe how good and right Patrick’s mouth felt teasing her. Great, how was she going to be able to only see him as a friend now?
Raising his mouth from her, he gazed into her eyes. “Was that good?”
“Yes, I think we can stop now.” She tried to move back, but Patrick wouldn’t loosen his grip.
“I’m not done yet. I think I need more practice.” Patrick slowly moved his mouth to her earlobe and gently pulled it into his moist mouth.
The flicker of his tongue sent a burst of longing straight to her kitty kat. Closing her eyes, Jada leaned closer to Patrick and allowed herself to get lost in the feeling. God, she didn’t know the last time a guy found her spot. It was unbelievable that she was feeling like this with Patrick out of all people.
“How are you feeling?” he breathed against her neck the second he let go of her ear.
“Good,” she whimpered, turning, allowing him better access.
“That’s what I wanted to hear,” Patrick growled then recaptured her mouth. The touch of his lips was a delicious sensation that she loved every second of.
Jada lost all thought as Patrick pulled her between his thighs and traced her back with the tips of his fingers. She was so into the kiss that she didn’t realize his tongue was in her mouth until it licked at hers.



                                                            Desire Excerpt:



“Love is for fools. I don’t know why you even bother dealing with the way she treats you,” Nick Lavery complained, glaring at his best friend across the room. “Just dump her bossy ass and move on with your life.”
“Man, you shouldn’t let what Carrie did to you make you hate being in love,” Richie, his best friend of twelve years, told him. “Carrie was a gold-digger. You deserve better than that. Maybe if you leave this damn apartment more. You might find someone new. Anyways, Kristy doesn’t treat me badly. We are in a relationship and people in love fight, but it passes it always does.”
“You keep that notion and you will come home to find a note taped to your fridge saying ‘I don’t mean for this to happen, but I’ve fallen in love with someone else,’ ” Nick bit out.
“Carrie left you for a personal trainer who owns a chain of workout gyms. How long do you think their relationship will last?”
“It will last as long as Kurt has the money to support Carrie. She loves to be pampered and taken care of. She’ll stay with him providing he has dollar signs around him,” Nick exclaimed then tossed back his shot of whiskery.
“Nick, you need to get over this. It happened eight months ago. Don’t waste anymore of your life on her. Move on and find someone else.”
Nick knew that Richie was giving him good advice, but he wasn’t ready to listen. He had given Carrie his heart and she stomped on it. No, he wasn’t about to fall for another lying, cheating worthless woman. One was enough in his life time.
“Are you listening to me? Every time I talk to you about this you blow me off. I miss us going out together on double dates,” Richie told him.
Nick placed his glass down on the table. He hated how Carrie had tuned him into such a bitter person, but he couldn’t help it. It was hard when he found out the person he had been in love with hadn’t returned his feelings. It was a bitter pill to swallow.
“I understand what you’re telling me. I’m working on getting Carrie out of my mind and heart, but I can’t do it. Damn it, I was going to propose to her. I was such a fool,” Nick growled. “I swear I’m not going to allow myself to be made a fool of again.”
“Don’t let your anger keep you from missing out on finding love again. It’s out there for you. All you have to do is open up your heart again.”
“Okay, Dr. Drew. I’ll open up my heart again when the right woman comes along until then I’m just going to have fun with women. No more trying to find ‘the one’. I’m too old for that shit now.”
“Are you sure about this? Do you really want to break some woman’s heart the way Carrie did yours?’ Richie asked, trying to reason with him. “It wouldn’t be fair to them. You don’t want them to feel the same pain as you are experiencing at the moment.”
“Well, I guess it would be best for them if they didn’t fall in love with me because I’m not going to fall in love with them. I’m done with all of that love crap. It’s a waste of time and energy.”
“Don’t you date just date an oblivious woman so you can only break her heart. That would be so wrong and you know it.”
“Calm down,” Nick grumbled. “I’m not planning to do that. God, you really get on my nerves sometimes. I’m only saying I won’t fall in love with another woman as deeply as I did in my past relationship.”
“Are you sure? You never know how you will react when real love hits you right between the eyes.”
“I’m positive. I’m not looking for love so it won’t find me and that suits me just fine,” Nick tossed back, hoping Richie would just drop it.”
“What ever you say,” Richie told him.

Monday, March 29, 2010

Welcome, Peg Herring

BLOG

Thanks to Roseanne for the invitation to guest on her blog. I offered to write about e-publishing, a bold step for one who knows so little about it. My first e-book, a “vintage” mystery called GO HOME AND DIE, comes out April 1, 2010, from Red Rose Publishing if all goes well.(http://redrosepublishing.com/bookstore/product_info.php?products_id=697),

It's a mystery that takes place in the late 1960s with a prim young woman, Carrie Walsh, and a hunky Vietnam vet, Jack Porter, teaming up to solve a murder. Carrie is attracted to Jack, but he's got secrets that threaten their relationship and their lives.

It's exciting to see a book come to the "publishing point". I’ve done my part, and two editors and a cover artist have done theirs, so stayed tuned!

I recently learned some things at EPICon, the meeting place of e-publishers, authors, and others interested in this fast-growing business. Let’s start with the bad news. E-publishing as a whole struggles to get respect in the world of publishing. Why? E-publishers are often very small (sometimes one-person) entities, which generates the image of a guy in the corner of his dining room, publishing obscure bits simply because he likes them. Other e-publishers blast the market, pushing out so many books that it is difficult to see how they are the least bit choosey. Many e-pubbed books are self-published, which makes many readers cringe. And e-books are associated with erotica and steamy romances, which, whether it’s fair or unfair, is not seen as the height of literary fiction.

There’s a lot of “the way it’s supposed to be done” bias as well. If a book is not traditionally published, it will not be eligible for reviews, awards, or even recognition from the usual sources that help authors succeed. Some rail against this fact, but realistically, how does an organization keep standards any other way? Who has the time and the energy to search through the thousands of e-books out there and separate the good from the bad from the ugly? Being “a published author” has made that differentiation, at least to some extent, for a long time, but control has been wrested from the editors and agents by technology. Nobody knows quite how to handle this step-child, e-publishing, so they tend to ignore it.

So what’s the good news?

E-publishing is gaining. Numbers, technology, authors, you name it. Even the big publishers are beginning to take note of the e-phenomenon, trying to figure out how to make it work for them.

It can be lucrative. Many e-pubbed authors are laughing all the way to the bank as traditionally published authors wait years for royalties. E-publishers (reputable ones, anyway) often pay quarterly, so returns come in much sooner (if you’ve done your marketing well ).

E-publishers claim (and authors I spoke with agreed) that they give an author greater freedom in writing what he/she wants to write. My agent originally suggested e-publishing because I have branded myself as a writer of historical in traditional publishing, but I also have several contemporary stand-alones. Good books, but not fodder for the big mills, and not in line with “Peg Herring, Tudor era writer”. My agent suggested I submit one of them to Red Rose, and that’s how GO HOME AND DIE came to be “Coming Soon”.

E-publishing houses tend to be small, so you get to know people. You’ll know after the first book if they are people you want to continue to work with. Best case scenario: each author becomes part of a supportive little group, sort of an “us against the world” mentality. Trying to get recognition for an e-book is daunting, but it can be fun, too.

If you aren’t familiar with EPIC, you might want to take a look. They work to help e-pubbed authors succeed, and the dues are very reasonable. The next con is a year away, but it couldn’t hurt to find out what they have going.

E-publishing: Less pressure to sell, sell, sell. More discretion in what you’d like to write next. And a check several times a year. Despite the fact that I will continue to work at traditional publishing, e-pubbing is a worthwhile venture for me. What can it hurt to have my name known in a few more places?

Bio: Peg Herring writes historical and “vintage” mysteries. Her latest hardcover, HER HIGHNESS’ FIRST MURDER (2010, Five Star), is the first of a series with Elizabeth Tudor as a protagonist. Her first e-book, GO HOME AND DIE, releases from Red Rose Publishing on April 1, 2010. When not writing, Peg loves reading, travel, gardening, and directing musical groups.



Go Home and Die

Carrie stood at the third-floor window, squinting as she watched Peter Callender in the parking lot below. The day was cool but bright, and the dumpy little man whose motives she knew so well moved busily in and out of her range of vision, disappearing several times down the alley and returning with a can of garbage each time. The overfilled receptacles were a lot for a man with spaghetti arms to carry, and the occasional scrape of metal brushing concrete sounded, but determination provided strength for the task. With great care, Peter dumped the contents of each can beside the last, forming a disgusting, noxious wall of garbage around the sides and rear of a cream-colored Cadillac sitting in his parking space.

The Caddy belonged to Peter’s brother and business partner, Jim Callender, who had usurped Peter’s space in order to allow an attractive female client to leave her brand new l968 Mustang convertible in Jim’s space. The sleek red car sat two spaces down, and Carrie noted the sparkle of its chrome wheels in the October sunlight without losing track of Peter’s progress.

Jim and the lady in question had gone off together for a “consultation,” a term that caused Peter and the third partner, their cousin Brad Callender, to roll their eyes each time Jim used it. Bluntly speaking, they had gone to a nearby hotel for a quickie, leaving their cars at the office for the sake of appearance. That meant no parking space was available for Peter when he returned from lunch. Now Peter’s Thunderbird sat in a “One Hour Parking Only” space on the street as he grimly took his revenge, one gooey pile of trash at a time.

As she turned away from the window, Carrie gave a little sigh. Her work was almost finished for the day, but she would not be leaving soon. When Peter had finished his juvenile prank and gone home, she would trek down to the Caddy and un-barricade it before Jim returned. She would do it in the name of peace and harmony in the office. Not that there was much of that.

Carrie had worked for the firm of Callender, Callender, and Callender for almost two years now,— longer than any other secretary had tolerated the antics of the three adult delinquents. Decent lawyers, successful men, and responsible citizens in many ways, they hated each other passionately and aired their feelings at peak volume when the mood struck one, two, or even all three of them.

Past secretaries had quit in tears, in anger, and in disgust, but Carrie stayed on, braving the shouting and the lunacy. Maybe she had become used to their ways, or, as her mother said over and over, maybe she had no sense. Mostly she could not face the prospect of looking for another job.

The coping mechanism developed over time was to foresee and forestall trouble whenever possible. When Brad, the cheap one, had billed his own uncle, Clayton Callender, at their highest rate for preparing his will, using the justification that “The old geezer is rolling in money,” Carrie had treated it as if it were her own clerical error and got Peter to fix it. Seeing Peter dithered with useless detail until papers were often filed late, she’d suggested a revolving system for proofing and left Peter out of the rotation when a deadline was close. She sometimes managed to keep Jim’s escapades with female clients a secret from the other two, although what they did know was scandalous enough.

Difficult as it was, Carrie made the office work, and the Callenders were grateful in their way. Still, it was awful when they went at each other, screaming, swearing, and shouting for hours, followed by a day, sometimes two or three, when Carrie was the only one any of the three would speak to. Peter and Jim were bad, but Brad egged them on, siding with Jim sometimes and Peter others. Occasionally, the brothers united against him, too. Carrie never knew how it would play out.

Today, she would remove the trash from around Jim’s car and hope that neither man mentioned it in the morning. Peter would think Jim too proud to say anything, and Jim would never know he had been the target of Peter’s vendetta, if she acted quickly.

As she started down the hallway to the stairs, she heard feet shuffling on the landing above and a voice called, “Where you goin’, Miss Walsh?” She turned to see Bea, the building’s janitor, coming down the stairs, mop in hand. Bea, twice Carrie’s size and age and suffering from bad feet, still did the work of three men. A static-y transistor radio broadcast Motown music from her belt. Bea claimed she cleaned better with accompaniment, and was especially fond of the Temptations.

She answered her own question. “You’re gonna clean up that mess, ain’t you? Everybody in the building’s snickerin’ about their latest stunt already.”

“It’ll only take a few minutes,” Carrie said defensively, “and tomorrow will be a lot easier.”

“It ain’t your job.” Bea set the mop down with a thump, and folds of skin under her chin wobbled as she shook her head. “All that hair you got still don’t give them men the right to treat you like a red-headed step-child.”

“They don’t do it to me. They do it to each other,” Carrie reasoned. “I hate it when they fight, so I fix what’s fixable.”

“Like when you cleaned the spaghetti off the wall after Peter missed Jim with it, or when you bought a new lamp with your own money so Brad wouldn’t know Jim busted his?” Bea shook her mop and the smell of pine wafted toward Carrie. “It ain’t right, you babying them. Lotsa better lawyers would hire a secretary good as you.”

Carrie laughed mirthlessly. “I don’t know any. They all want girls who have an associate’s.” She added somewhat wistfully, “And with class.”

Bea started to say, “You’re not so—” but Carrie interrupted, pointing to herself.

“I know what kind of impression I make. Frizzy hair. Twiggy body. A half-blind secretary with Coke-bottle glasses who has to squint to recognize faces.”

Bea put up an admonitory finger as if to argue, but Carrie went on in a burst of self-deprecation. “I’m lucky the Callenders are so hard to work for that they had to give me a chance.” She shoved her glasses back into place with a quick jab, a habit of necessity since the weighty lenses made the sturdy frames to slide down her nose constantly. “I’m grateful for this job. I’ll clean up Jim’s prank and go on.”

Bea appeared tempted to say more but closed her mouth firmly. Everything about Carrie screamed “plain”, —no attempt at a hairstyle, clothes that hid her figure, and a demeanor that invited others to ignore any feelings she might have. “Men don’t make passes at girls who wear glasses.” “Nice girls don’t talk back.” “Ladies don’t raise their voices.” Societal mantras formed Carrie’s operating principles. Although some women of the ‘60s were learning to ignore them, Carrie believed.

Bea sighed to indicate that a cleaning woman could supply only so much encouragement and pulled yellow cotton gloves from her back pocket. “All right, but I’ll help. It ain’t my mess, neither, but together we’ll get done twice as fast.”

The two women worked quickly, Bea shoveling the trash back into the metal cans with a large dustpan and Carrie dragging them into the alley from whence they came. Bea insisted on taking the dirtier job, since she was dressed for it, although Carrie’s earth-toned skirt and sweater would hardly have shown traces of more earth.

It was five-twenty when Carrie, hauling the last empty can to within Bea’s reach, looked at her watch. “Oops! It’s getting late. I’ve got to call the courthouse before five-thirty.” She surveyed the scene to judge their progress. Feeling dirty despite Bea’s efforts to keep her from the worst of the mess, she longed to finish, but there was no delaying this call. “You’d better get back to your own work. I’ll take the last can back after I make my call and close the office.”

Bea checked her watch, as well. “I am getting behind in my work. Tell you what. I’ll fill this last one and leave it here. You can drop it off in the alley on your way to the bus stop.” She grinned, displaying tiny, even teeth. “It’s Tuesday, so the manager will be checking up on me any time now. He always stops by when it’s two-for-one night at the TNT Bar down the block.”

“Thanks for the help. You’re an angel.” Carrie gave the older woman a hug and headed upstairs while Bea scooped up the last of the trash with practiced movements.

Carrie returned fifteen minutes later, having finished the office chores. Autumn’s early darkness had descended quickly. The other tenants had gone home, a few making smart-aleck remarks about the cause of the mess as they passed. No one else had offered to help.

Hitching her purse strap higher on her shoulder, Carrie picked up the last trashcan by its handles, feeling the cold metal through the gloves she had pulled on. This one smelled of mimeograph ink and something fruity, maybe peaches. It was overly full, and she concentrated on keeping it upright so as not to spill the contents as she entered the alley. Along the wall stood the six cans she’d lugged back earlier, and she set the last one down at the end of the line.

Movement caught her eye, and she peered at where the alley opened at the opposite end. Three human forms huddled there. Two men stood over the third, all of them silhouetted against a lighter building across the street. Carrie saw only shapes, but one man searched the fallen one’s clothing while the other stood back, separating himself from the action. In her surprise, she tipped the trash can, and its lid dropped to the pavement with a clatter. The two standing men looked up, startled, and hurried away, disappearing from sight almost immediately.

Carrie stood for a moment in shock, unable to take in what she had seen. When she recovered enough to consider the man on the ground, she moved cautiously down the alley. He lay flat on his back, very still, hands clutched to his body. When she called out to him, he moaned but did not move. After checking the street to be sure the other two were gone, she knelt beside him, unsure what to do.

Only slightly older than she, the man’s even features were pinched with pain. Blood stained his corduroy jacket and tight-ribbed sweater. He had been stabbed in the chest, and she sensed immediately that the wound was deadly.

Moaning again, the man seemed to become aware of her presence. His mouth moved as he tried to form words, and she leaned close, touching his hand to reassure him.

“I’m going for help. Don’t move. Lie still and rest. I’ll get you to a doctor.”

Surprisingly strong fingers gripped hers, and the man tried again to speak. A whisper came with each ragged breath. She listened intently. Whatever he had to say was important to him.

“Tell Jack. Namwise. Kali—Shurenz. Please. Jack.”

Feeling the fingers begin to lose their grip, Carrie held the hand tightly, looked into the dying man’s eyes, and said the only thing she could say. “I’ll tell Jack exactly what you said. Now rest.” A strangled sigh told her it was no use to go for a doctor, but she held onto the hand until the grip relaxed. With a sad sense of finality, she closed the sightless eyes and went to find a different kind of help.

Welcome, Mary Kennedy Eastham

Where is the Want? - Digging Deep to Understand Your Character's Core


by Mary Kennedy Eastham

What does your character wish for? We all have something that we think will make us whole. The fun we can have as writers, is to go inside our character's heads on the page and either not give this want to our characters OR to give it to them and to make sure that once gotten, it's somehow lacking, not at all what they expected.
Back story to me is the storyteller's gold. It is that silk lining woven into a favorite skirt, not seen but so soft and lush against the skin. Sitting at cafes, coffee shops, in a comfy chair at Borders, I eavesdrop on people and get fabulous back story ideas to use in my stories. People don't edit themselves when they think their conversation is private. It's kind of like that saying - character is who you are when no one is looking. I saw one woman slip a note inside a book cover, then walk away, nearly sobbing. The note said simply: 'You must do the right thing. You must marry her. I will always love you.' I heard another woman, who looked to be in her mid 70's, say to a friend: 'He said I'd never amount to much. Can you imagine a father saying that to his daughter?' I overheard a woman in a London pub say this to another woman: 'I've known your husband for years, but you wouldn't know that. My cat used to shit in your planter. But you wouldn't know that either.'
When I was getting my first Master's Degree in Clinical Psychology, I worked with teenagers in a 30 day lock-down facility. These kids were just weeks away from turning 18 and aging out of the Juvenile Justice System. This one boy, Kevin, who I had a soft spot for, held a knife to my throat in a kitchen stand-off late one night, pulling me into a butler's closet. As I was waiting to be rescued by one of my stronger colleagues, Kevin brushed my hair and sang to me, beautiful songs he had written to a mother who abandoned him when he was only two. He remembered the sweet smell of her hair. At his drug addicted mother's funeral, he asked his grandmother for scissors to cut a tuft of his mother's hair.
He carried it still, in his wallet, taped to a tattered Denny's napkin.
What would any of us be without our history? It can be our destiny or a chance to redo it differently, in a better way maybe. Like all of you, I love creating my characters. Sosie Bend, my heroine in Night Surfing loves vintage world globes and wears her mother's wedding band on her right ring finger. She wonders what people keep under their pillows at night and she drops pennies on the ground near elementary schools so children will find them and feel special, the way she did as a child. She loves the color blue, a blue within blue of sky meeting water on a summer's afternoon. Calling herself a Love Amnesiac, Sosie starts a blog called Love, Sosie promising to spend the rest of her life trying to find this one thing she really wants.
In the end, when we're lucky, our characters tell us who they are and the best we can do is to just stay out of their way and run with it. But on the days when they (or we!) are sluggish, not really in the mood to write (oh, yes, we ALL have those days!) ask yourself, what does my hero or heroine REALLY WISH FOR? The answer may surprise even you.

MARY KENNEDY EASTHAM, M.A., MFA, a 2010 Celebrity Achiever, is genre hopping right now. Her first book, The Shadow of a Dog I Can't Forget' - Poetry & Prose is in its 4th Printing, Mary is finishing up the last short story in her collection The Possibilities of Love, is halfway through her first novel Night Surfing, and she is thinking about writing the screenplay version of Night Surfing in a month-long writing contest challenge. She loves being a Guest Blogger, and she loves her four Golden Retrievers JoJo, Sabrina, Flynn and puppy Oliver. Check out her website at:

www.RP-Author.com/MKE

Sunday, March 28, 2010

Welcome Angela Kay Austin

1: Thank you so much for being here, Angela. First up is the obligatory question. When did you first begin writing?


A. I know this probably sounds so ordinary, but I’ve written for as long as I can remember. Every since I was kid doodling in my pink and white diary about my secret crushes, I’ve written down my every thought, and then as I neared my teen years, I began to change those stories into articles for magazines.


2: What inspired you to write?

A. My inspiration came from everything around me. I was a pretty quiet child, and writing gave me a way to express myself. Reading gave me a way to explore, and I one day Judy Blume’s Are You There God It’s Me Margaret? Made me believe I could really try to merge the two or at least that might be fun to try. The character in her book spoke to me, and the way she told me the story inspired me to try to do the same.


3: What do you like the most and least about writing?

A. I like the creative process: determining the way that my characters will interact with each other, layering in the emotion, and hopefully bring my characters to life. By the time I finish a book, I’m in love with all of them. The research side of telling the story usually bogs me down: waiting on return phone calls, going to the library, or just surfing the net. Sometimes you’re researching such a small tedious fact, but you need it for the authenticity of the story.



4: What do you for fun and relaxation when not writing? Movies.

A. SyFy is my guilty vice. If not that, then you can find me in a movie theatre or a theatre house somewhere. I love everything creative. I also love live concerts, but I prefer to be up close, and personal vs. the huge venues.



5: Which authors do you like to read?

A. Jeanine Frost is my latest addiction, but so many are on my shelf: Charlaine Harris, Christine Feehan, Sherrilyn Kenyon, J R Ward, and Karen Marie Moning. Outside of romance: Barbara Kingsoliver, Wally Lamb, Jane Green, Tony Morrison.



6: What’s the one thing you’d most like people to know about you?

A. I guess that one of the reasons I love to write…is to connect with people around me, so if they read one of my books, I’d love them to send me an email, and let me know what they did or didn’t like about it. In this world of texting, and computers, I feel like one of the things people just don’t do that much of anymore is take the time to really know the next person. So, I love writing stories about people taking chances, and not giving up on possibilities.





7: Tell me about your current novel, where I can find it and your website/blog.

A. Love’s Chance released on February 11th. It is a #1 bestseller for Red Rose Publishing.
Here’s a blurb: To pay back her parents and prevent the loss of their family business, Sinclair Mosley leaves her family and friends behind. Pennsylvania doesn’t welcome her with open arms, but Chance O’Malley does. At the risk of losing everything that brought her to Pennsylvania, including her family’s restaurant, Sinclair must decide if she’s willing to take a chance on love.

Readers can read an excerpt at my website, http://www.angelakayaustin.com/ and purchase from Red Rose Publishing.


8: Do you have any tips for aspiring authors?

A. My only tip would be not to give up. No matter what anyone else believes, if you feel in your heart that writing is what you want to do, then write. Write anything for anybody anytime. Just find a way to accomplish what you want. Each step you take gets you closer to your goal.



9: Do you base your characters on real-life people?

A. No, but I base them on things I’ve experiences, and things that my friends have experienced, as well as things I read or see. Physically, I might use celebrities to help me visualize my characters.





10: Where do you get your ideas and what inspired you to write this book?
A. Love’s Chance is based in Pennsylvania where I lived for 3 years, and I based the characters on things I’d seen while there.



11: What are you currently working on?

A. My next piece is set in my hometown of Memphis, TN, and it’s based on a lot of the things that we see happening today in America: economy, job loss, loss of relations and families, etc. So many people have had to determine how to make a new beginning, and that is what this book is all about.



12. Is there anything else you’d like us to know about you?

A. It took me about 15 years before I had my first book published, and Love’s Chance was not my first manuscript, so if there is something out there that someone is passionate about doing, I truly hope they do not give up on it. It’s wonderful to see a dream come true!



Here’s an excerpt from Love’s Chance    
Chance pulled out a chair beside Sinclair and sat. He leaned back and rested his arm across the back of her chair. His thigh touched hers underneath the table. “Your presentation was really good. I think you were the only one who actually kept to the time limit.” He ran a hand across his military hair cut. “How long was Raquel up there? Forty-five minutes.”

She could feel her cheeks redden due to his nearness. “I think so.”

Chance’s look fixed on something across the room; he shifted in his seat. His body leaned closer to hers. “So, when are you leaving? I’ll walk you to your car.”

She followed his stare. Raquel Dickinson, Bakery Category Manager, stalked in their direction. Her broad, angry movements destroyed the effect of the body hugging dress she wore. Reddish blonde hair flowed like untamed fire over bare shoulders.

Sinclair searched the room for her boss, Daniel Houser. She caught a glimpse of his back as he and his wife slipped out of the dining hall. As the breath escaped her, her shoulders slumped. Not so much as a pat on the back or job well done. For some reason, he spent as little time as possible around her. He wasn’t a bad guy, but he definitely was not the ‘go to’ guy in case of emergency. “It looks like I can leave at any time.”

Chance stood, and pulled out Sinclair’s chair. “Let’s go.”

Raquel reached their table before they could leave. “Calling it a night so early?”

He stood between the two women, and reached for Sinclair’s hand to help her stand. “Yeah Raquel it’s been a long night, and I’ve got a meeting in the morning.”

Raquel leaned around Chance. “Sinclair, do you mind if I walk out with the two of you?”

“Of course not. Are you ready?”

Chance released Sinclair’s hand, but walked closely behind. “Raquel, where did you park?”

She snaked her arm around his. “Next to your truck.”

“And Sinclair what about you?”

“I am on the other side of the lot. You really don’t have to walk me all of the way.”

“Sinclair, Chance and I would not dream of letting you walk to your car alone.” Raquel rubbed her hand up and down Chance’s arm, and looked up into his eyes. “Would we Chance?”

Chance stopped underneath the awning in front of the banquet hall. “Sinclair, wait here. Come on Raquel.” Chance and Raquel walked into the night toward their cars.

Sinclair didn’t wait; she headed in the direction of her car. Footsteps behind her caught her attention.

“Sinclair. Stop.” Chance’s voice was stern. He blocked her path. “I asked you to wait.”

“I know, but I didn’t want to be any trouble. You and Raquel…you seemed—”

“We seemed what? If you have a question, ask it.” His stare was amplified by his silence.

She had questions, but they didn’t matter. She shook her head from side to side. “No. It’s really none of my business.”

“None of your business?” Chance walked slow and close.

“No. You and Raquel have your own thing.”

“We do have a history, Sinclair, but—”

Sinclair stopped at her car door. “But it’s none of my business.”

Chance stepped in closer. “What if I want that to change?”

She took a step back. “It couldn’t”

He stepped back, and stared. “It couldn’t or you wouldn’t let it?”

“Chance, I can’t.” She turned to open her car door. “Thanks for walking me to my car.” She stepped back to open the door, for a moment her body fit into his. She slid into her car, and shut the door behind her.

Friday, March 26, 2010

More Snow

Here it is almost the end of March and we have more snow. It doesn't really surprise me, after all, it is still March and although it's officially Spring on the calendar, it's really still winter. In fact April often brings snow. We've had big snowstorms the last weekend in April several times. I'm not really complaining and fortunately, we only got a light covering, but after all that beautiful warm sixty degree days to go back to the thirties, well I don't mind telling you, it feels a whole lot colder. Fortunately, it's going to get warmer tomorrow and by the end of the week, it's supposed to be back in the sixties. I'll take that.  At least the sun is shining today.
I'm still hard at work on my WIP. Hopefully, I'll have it finished before long. For some reason, this is a slow mover. Some books just flow and in a matter of weeks, the rough draft is finished. Others, like this one, seem to take forever. Of course, the fact that I was blocked for a whole year on this one didn't help.  This was the first book I ever plotted out and outlined. I'll never do that again. A speaker at our chapter RWA meeting suggested trying it. Big mistake for me. I don't write that way. I've never written that way. They suggested writing a synopsis first, which I did. Unfortunately, I found it difficult to waver from that synopsis. It took a whole year to forget it and move on. I was then able to come up with new ideas and move on. So hopefully, this one will be finished soon. 
Happy Spring everyone.

Monday, March 22, 2010

Welcome, Deb Denson

1: Thank you so much for being here, Deb. First up is the obligatory question. When did you first begin writing?

A. I toyed around with little projects in my teens, like poetry and a children’s book. The real kicker was working on a script for a movie called The Summoning with a friend of mine. I loved working on the back-story of that movie – I realized I had a knack for that detail.



2: What inspired you to write?
A. Another friend asked me if I fantasized. When I answered yes, he asked as a whole story – beginning, middle and end? It was then I began to think about those fantasies as a complete story. Mostly, my inspiration is other authors who excel at spinning good yarns – like Patrick O’Brian and Anya Seaton. I love historical fiction!



3: What do you like the most and least about writing?
A. When I really get going I love the way a plot sort of evolves on its own. My first novel began from a personal fantasy about being the only woman on a ship full of men. I look at it now and see that framework, but oh boy, did it take off from there and went directions I never, never expected!

There are sections of the book that are segues. Those are the posers and the areas where I get stuck for inspiration. Sometimes its historical back-story and it’s a struggle not to bore the reader!



4: What do you for fun and relaxation when not writing?
A. I was a costumer in the theatre for years, and I still dabble in sewing – mostly now for my 5 & 7 year-old nieces. I love gardening, watching movies, reading, and spending time in good conversation with my dear friends.



5: Which authors do you like to read?
A. Patrick O’Brian over and over! Michael Crichton (what a shame is gone). JD Robb, Anya Seaton, JRR Tolkien, Terry Brooks and Barbara Hambly’s early works.



6: What’s the one thing you’d most like people to know about you?
A. For many years I subscribed to the expectation that my goal as a woman was to marry and have children. This was not an unpleasant prospect by any means, but God had other plans for me. After many years of living alone and wishing it were otherwise, at last I am very proud to say I have embraced my “single-hood” and try to celebrate it every day! I love the romance of being a “spinster’, living with two cats, but my life is my own and I make every effort to live it fully.



7: Tell me about your current novel, where I can find it and your website/blog.
A. Magician’s Spell is a historical, adventure romance set in the 1800s, during the Napoleonic war. Although the title implies it, the book is not about magic, unless of course we are talking about the enchantment surrounding Lady Johanna Cornehl and Captain Harold “Hal” Monroe. Magician, is a privateer commanded by Capt. Monroe. Although he has a history with Johanna’s father, the lord admiral, she is not aware of that when she steps aboard Magician to be transported to England. What begins on that three week trip leads Johanna and Hal through adventures involving treason, the theatre, an illicit affair, and a desperate rescue attempt. Magician remains a constant throughout their exploits and figures prominently in bringing the two together in more than matrimony.

The website is: www.magicians-spell.com.

My blog is: http://debrasuedenson.blogspot.com.

Magician’s Spell will be published as an e-book from Red Rose Publishing on March 25, 2010. Their website: www.redrosepublishing.com.



8: Do you have any tips for aspiring authors?
A. I just finished reading On Writing by Stephen King, who said the one question he gets asked most is, and I paraphrase, would you write if it weren’t for the money? That question is asked in the last chapter of The First Five Pages (another excellent book I recommend on writing). Of all the questions that need a true soul-searching, honest answer – that is the one. If you say yes – persevere.

On a practical note – concentrate a lot of energy, do a lot of research on your query letter. Each time you get a letter saying: not this time – re-work that letter. Tweak until it gets you on your way! Do not despair.



9: Do you base your characters on real-life people?
A. Oh yes, but usually only a facet of that person. For instance in the second book I have a character who is a clairvoyant. I actually knew a man who was so keen in reading people by what they said or didn’t say, he was suspected to be a mind reader. It was this aspect of his character I loved and used.



10: Where do you get your ideas and what inspired you to write this book?
A. I plowed through all of Patrick O’Brian’s Aubrey/Maturin books and couldn’t help, but wonder if a headstrong woman was placed aboard those wooden communities comprised mostly of men, what havoc would she bring. Surprisingly, I found I was working out my relationship with my own father through the character of Johanna Cornehl. It was quite eye opening.



11: What are you currently working on?
A. The third book of the series which I have tentatively named Ruse de Guerre. It takes a character from Magician’s Spell, Dr. James Emrys, and develops his romantic attachment. The book’s title reflects tricks used in war to fool the enemy. The lead female character has her own secret she uses to survive, and it certainly gets in the way of her love life! The second book, His Apprentice, is written, but requires editing. It takes the characters of Timothy Ruhl and Emily Petranella from Magician’s Spell and weaves their romance, or attempted romance.


12. Is there anything else you’d like us to know about you?
A. My father was unhappy being anywhere for any long period of time while I was growing up. We lived in Michigan, Panama, California and Indiana, but never for more than five years. (he was buried at sea, so he continues to roam) I am pleased to say I have planted myself in Royal Oak, Michigan, with no plans to relocate. And I love it here!!

Of course, there’s my plan and God’s plan. You just never know.


Magician’s Spell



As Hal ascended the companionway ladder up onto the main deck, he looked up at the afternoon sun. One bell was struck; marking the beginning half hour of the first dogwatch. Satisfied that preparations were well under way for departure on the morning tide, he ordered his launch, crossed the bay and made his way back to Willowood.

Here he was pleased to discover Johanna patiently awaiting his return. She greeted him at the door and escorted him into the great room where she suggested, and he eagerly accepted, indulging in some music. Settling on a piece that equally addressed their skills, Hal led, picking out the opening notes of the fugue, after which Johanna ably followed. Three compositions later, she rose from the bench and stretched.

“We have about two hours before we have to leave.”

“Where are we going?”

Taking her signal, Hal put the instrument into its case and closed the lid.

“To Naomi’s…for dinner. I am sorry, Hal, didn’t I tell you?”

“Yes, you probably did, but in my haste to—”

“—to leave your wife—again.”

Sheepishly, he looked at her and said, “My love, it was your suggestion.”

“So it was. Come, husband, let’s get ready for dinner, shall we?”

Lacing his fingers in the hand she had placed through his arm, he asked, “It’s five fifteen. Do you need so much time to get ready, love?”

She smiled in response. He was delighted to see her sense of humor returned. He escorted her up to the bedroom and closed the door. Taking her in his arms, he held her close for a few minutes, then easing the embrace, he leaned back and kissed her on the forehead.

“Come,” she said. “You can do better.” She sighed and continued, “I am so tired of people treating me like I am going to break. I am made of tougher stuff. Come on, man.”

Johanna reached forward, grabbed him by the front of his shirt and yanked him toward her. Her lips covered his and her hands wandered over his chest and his back.

Hal delighted in the unexpected pleasure of her assault. He agreed that his approach had been tenuous of late, so he let her take the initiative. But, until his apprehension faded, he limited his response to gently returning her kisses.

“Not good enough, sailor,” she reached down and unfastened the front of his breeches. “Get on with it.”

Her boldness transformed his tenderness to hunger. They had only a single interlude since their wedding day. Never had being physically chaste numbered among his expectations for the relationship. Johanna slid her hand inside his breeches, caressing him shamelessly. Her touch was agony, yet he was still uncertain at handling her physically.

In the next moment, his indecision proved moot, for she pushed him onto the bed. Staring up at the ceiling, he felt his breeches and drawers dragged down around his boots. Climbing atop of him, she pushed his shirt up around his neck and then caressed and nibbled, moving from nipple to nipple and back to his lips. While straddling him, she unfastening her bodice and tossed it off into a corner of the room. Her skirt and stays quickly joined it. Taking him by the wrists, she placed his hands on her breasts. She then leaned down and whispered in his ear.

“Am I going to have to do it myself?”

Not waiting for his answer, she tugged her petticoat up around her thighs, and rising to her knees, she reached between the two of them and guided him in place. He groaned.

“Finally, the man says something.”

Her head thrown back, she laughed as she rode him to the peak of pleasure. In the end, she fell across his chest, her hair spilling onto his face.

“Right,” was all he managed to say as he brushed the hair away from his mouth. Facetiously he asked, “Do you think we are going to be late for dinner?”

Friday, March 19, 2010

Welcome Kat Holmes

1: Thank you so much for being here, Kat. First up is the obligatory question. When did you first begin writing?

A. I have written as far back as I can remember. But I owe getting published to an author friend of mine who encouraged me to try submitting. When your writing idol tells you to do something, you don’t argue.


2: What inspired you to write?
A. I just love stories and the way words work together to paint a picture.



3: What do you like the most and least about writing?
A. What I like most is creating new worlds and people and putting them into situations. What I like least is writing the dreaded synopsis.



4: What do you for fun and relaxation when not writing?
A. I play a lot of video games and I like to watch certain TV shows. I also read a lot. I never ever want to forget why I love writing so much but getting too busy to read.



5: Which authors do you like to read?
A. That’s a very long list. But just to name a few, N.J. Walters, Kresley Cole, Yasmine Galenorn, Christine Feehan, Lynsay Sands, and of course you. This is just a small list though. It could go on until the end of time.



6: What’s the one thing you’d most like people to know about you?
A. Gee that’s a tough one. I think the one thing I most want people to know is that I really don’t get the kind of action, in or out of the bedroom that my characters do. LOL


7: Tell me about your current novel, where I can find it and your website/blog.
A. My current novel is called Voice In The Night and it’s an Autumn Rose tale about an older woman and a younger man. It can be found on Red Rose Publishing’s website and I can be found either on my website at http://www.authorkatholmes.webs.com or on my blog at http://katluvr130.blogspot.com



8: Do you have any tips for aspiring authors?
A. Never give up no matter how many rejections you get. If you truly believe in yourself and your writing it will happen. Also, don’t take rejections personally. I know easier said than done, but really, not all rejections come because they don’t like your work. Some come because that particular publisher doesn’t take that exact genre. Keep trying.



9: Do you base your characters on real-life people?
A. Sometimes but not always. My current heroine is only partly inspired by a real person but in my next book the characters are inspired by Greek mythology.




10: Where do you get your ideas and what inspired you to write this book?
A. My ideas come from lots of places, myths, pictures, real life. Voice In The Night actually came about from a real life experience of someone I know. I won’t say more than that though.



11: What are you currently working on?
A. I am currently working on book five in a brand new series for Red Rose. The series is called Gods At Work and book one comes out in July. It’s titled Working Under Covers.



12. Is there anything else you’d like us to know about you?
A. I have two cats who are my world. In fact, they are how I chose my pen name.