An Interview with Beth Caudill

BethCaudill-FacebookCover-StoryBible

How did you get started writing?

While I’ve always created stories in my mind, I didn’t try to write them down until after having my second son.  I was a stay-at-home-mom and needed the escape of writing stories.  Boys are weird creatures and think the strangest things are entertaining or funny.

What genre(s) do you write in and why?

I write fantasy and paranormal romance. I love creating new worlds and playing with creatures from myths and legends.

What is your favorite part of writing?

Creating a new world and deciding on the rules of magic and what creatures inhabit it. I’m afraid I have Bright-Shiny-Syndrome. New ideas always come along right when you’re supposed to be working on a specific story. It’s hard to resist the call of a brand new world.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

Characters.  I don’t understand people in real life, how can I create realistic characters for my stories.  There are techniques, but it is a struggle for me.  I naturally come up with plot events easier than characters that readers would embrace.

What is your typical day like?

I’ll wake up while my husband and oldest son are getting ready to leave.  After they are gone for the day, I will either read or watch one tv show for an hour.  Then I’ll shower, walk the dog and make breakfast.  If I’m lucky the youngest will still be asleep and I’ll get to write for a half hour or an hour.  If I’m not lucky, then he is awake and ready for the day so we start school.

While he works, I maybe able to slip in fifteen or twenty minutes of writing but usually I have to either help or keep him on task. About three thirty in the afternoon we’ll stop school for the day and drive to pick up the oldest.  Sometime around 8 or 9 pm, I’ll be able to get back to writing.  I’m not usually very creative at night, so I’ll do some editing or other work.

What is your favorite dessert/food?    

Ice Cream.  I love ice cream – vanilla, strawberry, cherry vanilla, or ice cream with candy in it.  I may visit Dairy Queen each week…as a treat for my kids of course.

Desk-NewYearDo you have a view in your writing space?  What does your space look like?

My writing space is a corner of my upstairs bonus room.  I can see out of the window at an angle.  It’s nice to have indirect sunlight in the mornings when I’m trying to write.  This is a picture right after clearing the desk of paper to start the New Year.

 

 

Tell us a little about yourself and your latest book.

I’m a really slow writer. It takes me about a year to complete a novella.  Mainly because I’ve been busy homeschooling my special needs sons who have different conditions on the Autism Spectrum. Also there is a lot of stress which interferes with my creative ability.

My latest releases are actually a series of Mini Story Bibles I created as a way to kick start my writing. This fall when we enrolled my oldest son in a private school, I had a bit more time to write in the mornings.  Except my creativity had fled and my old writing processes weren’t working.

I wanted something on paper that had space for notes and areas for drawing or pasting in pictures. Something tactile that I would be more involved with than my digital story bible provided. Initially, I thought it would be about 10 pages but I ended up with over 50 pages.  Talking with some friends, I expanded the designs into different genres.

What do you have planned for the future?

My current manuscript is the third novella in my Paranormals of Arilase series.  I hope to publish it by the fall and then I’ll release a box set of all three stories.

Next I’ll work on my Tales of Ellemarlene fantasy series and begin a contemporary fantasy series.  I have a bunch of partially started stories so there are many more ideas in the queue.

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A few screen captures from the Historical Writer’s Mini Story Bible for Bedside and Travel

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Historical-Worldbuilding

 

 

 

 

 

 

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bethcaudillphoto-smBio

Although Beth grew up in West Virginia, she currently resides in North Carolina with her husband, two sons and a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel who makes an excellent lap warmer. Blending the analytical and creative sides of her brain, she delights in creating fantasy worlds for others. Catch her online most days except when NCIS and Once Upon a Time air.

Website – http://BethCaudill.net/

 

 

Book Blurb:

Dream. Explore. Write.

Historical-SB-600x746The Historical Writer’s Mini Story Bible for Bedside and Travel is your first stop along the path to writing. You set the pace for discovering your imaginary worlds and conflicts within your stories.

Each book section includes an area for you to brainstorm words associated with your idea, detail pages for up to five characters including picture and attire frames, diagram and notes for cataloging your plot points, space to identify historical landmarks and events, frames to sketch settings and scenes, lines for recording your research and more.

Keep your story details in one convenient journal that easily travels or resides next to your bed. Ideas come at all hours of the day, don’t lose your thoughts because you couldn’t find paper.

Paperback Book Buy Link – http://www.amazon.com/Historical-Writers-Story-Bedside-Travel/dp/0985378182/

 

An interview with Margaret Fieland

Robs Rebellion 200x300How did you get started writing?

For years I wrote poetry which I scribbled in notebooks and stashed in the attic. Then one day I wrote a poem I wanted to keep. I earn my living as a computer software engineer, so what with work and home, the poem was always on the computer I wasn’t on. I found an online website and storered some poems there, then found another and another. Eventually I found a better spot for my poems, but by then I was hooked. I started taking myself seriously as a poet when I was runner up in a poetry contest.

I started writing fiction when I wrote a chapter book that was sparked by a friend who lost his wife and children in a  fire. Then I spent the  next year and a half learning how to write fiction.

What genre(s) do you write in and why?

Right now I’m writing poetry, science fiction, and fantasy. I’ve been a sci fi fan since I was a kid (I picked Robert A. Heinlein’s Farmer in Sky for my tenth birthday) but up until 2010, I’d never written any, mostly because of a phobia about world-building. Then in September of 2010 I decided to use NaNo (National Novel Writing Month, which happens in November) to write a sci fi novel, figuring I could afford the month’s time. I spent most of the intervening six weeks in world-building: creatintg my aliens, the Terran Federation, its and politics, the alien’s history, society, mores, art and literature, etc. I  ended up with about a page of plot notes as well.

Then from January through about June or July I edited. It was accepted for publication and became Relocated, the first in the Novels of Aleyne series.

What inspired your latest book?

Part of the impetus behind the series, most of which takes place on Aleyne, an alien planet with a desert environment and a Terran Federation Guard base  on it, was because at the time my middle son was in the army serving a tour of duty in Afghanistan. Of course, in the series, the aliens are the good guys.

I never planned to write a series, but my characters refused to leave me alone. After I finished the first novel and was editing it, I aserked myself why one of the characters,  Ardaval, was living alone in a large house. I ended up with a one-liner about his former partners and what became Broken Bonds, the second novel in the series.  Rob’s Rebellioin, the latest novel, follows Colonel Robert Walker, the officer who (spoiler alert) arrests Major Brad Reynolds, the main character in Broken Bonds, for treason.

What is your favorite part of writing?

When I finish the first draft and I know what the novel is about.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

Figuring out the initial plot arc and what the novel is really about.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

When I wrote Relocated, I also wrote thirty poems by a poet who exists in the universe of the novel. Eight of the poems appear in the text of the novel, but I self-published the whole collection for several reasons:

My publisher doesn’t publish poetry

I wanted the whole collection available as a companion to the book

I waffled about submitting the poetry collection somewhere.

A friend, Michele Graf, edited the collection for me, and I ended up publishing it through CreateSpace. It was a very positive experience.

Where do you get the ideas for your stories?

My characters wake me in the middle of the night whispering until I give in, take notes, and promise to write the book.

What advice do you have for other authors wanting to self-publish?

Get an editor. You need another pair of eyes to look over your manuscript

How likely are people you meet to end up in your next book?

Pretty  unlikely. I admit I’ve shamelessly stolen names I like for my characters, but mostly the people themselves are safe. I did put my kids’ grandmother into my chapter book, but she’s the only one I recall off the top of my head. Now interesting incidents  or stories are another matter. Several of the stories my dad told  about his experiences during World War II have ended up in my books.

When did you start writing toward publication? 

For the poetry, when I realized my poetry could be publication-worthy, and for the fiction, when I wrote the chapter book and realized it was a hot mess and I needed help.

Will you share some encouraging words for authors still struggling for that first contract?

Don’t let your imagination limit you. I never imagined myself becoming a writer, and especially not a writer of fiction. That  was a failure of imagination more than anything else. And don’t be afraid to admit your weaknesses as a writer and to work on improving them.

What’s next for you?

I’m working on another sci fi novel. I’ve finished the first draft, but it needs a major overhaul. I also have a  fantasy novel I need to get back to at some point.

Blurb

Colonel Rob Walker always does his duty, even when it means risking  shaky relationship with his family. When he’s ordered to bring the treaty negotiations between the Terran Federation and the Aleyni to a successful conclusion, he’s determined to do just that, even when both sides would rather he fail. How can Rob pull off a miracle and avoid a war, one where both sides could be destroyed?

Trailer:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9lRxFdOJp6Q

Excerpt

“Laura? Carol? Where is everybody?” Rob drew in a deep breath.

Footsteps clattered on the fake wood floors. “Carol took the children to Fellowship. I didn’t want to go.” Tear streaks marked the dust accumulated on Laura’s face. “I want to go home. I don’t want to live in this dump.”

“This is home,” Rob grumbled. “I’m commander of this base. This is my posting. Why would you expect me to take us back to New Oregon?”

“You might have refused the posting.” Laura’s mouth formed a straight line in her oval face. “You can resign from the Federation Guard.”

“Resign? What would I do then? Come on, Laura, be realistic. I’ve got two wives and four children to support. We wouldn’t even have the price of tickets home for us on a commercial star ship” What the blazes would become of his career if he quit? His father’s sneering face rose in his mind. His father continued to predict Rob’s career would crash and burn. He clenched his fist. He’d do anything to prove his father wrong.

“Surely you can find other work.” Laura swiped a hand across her eyes. “Everyone here hates us.”

“For God’s sake, Laurie, I’m a fifty year old career colonel. The Guard is my life. My career. What else would I do?” Rob stomped into the living area and over to a small section devoted to cooking. “What the hell is there to eat around here?”

Laura shrugged and dropped into a chair at a small table. “Check for yourself.” She glared at Rob, her arms crossed over her chest. “You can starve for all I care.”

Rob pulled out another chair and sat opposite her. “We’re not going home, er, back to New Oregon, and that’s final. Relations between the base and the Aleyni are touchy enough. They liked Reynolds, and I arrested him for treason. The treaty with the Federation is up for renegotiation. If the Guard sent the wrong officer, the Aleyni could refuse negotiation altogether. I’m not going to be the one who is responsible for starting a war.” He was sick of defending himself for doing his duty. He was a soldier, blast it. He might not be much of a commander, but no one was going to fault him for shirking his duty.

“You’re being melodramatic,” Laura protested.

“Maybe, but we’re staying here.” Rob stood and jerked open the cold store, which held nothing but some juice. “Come on, we’re going to the market. We’ll find someplace to eat.” He extended a hand to Laura and pulled her to her feet.

“There’s nothing here and nowhere to go.”

“Not on the base, but in Aleyne City.” Rob pulled out his pocket comp and began searching for Restaurants, Aleyne City.

“Not until I wash up.” Laura glared at him and stumped off down the hall.

Rob sighed and lowered himself into a chair to wait

photo1Bio:

Born and raised in New York City, Margaret Fieland has been around art and music all her life.  Her poems and stories have appeared in journals such as  Turbulence Magazine, Front Range Review, and All Rights Reserved. She is one of the Poetic Muselings. Their poetry anthology, Lifelines, was published by Inkspotter Publishing in November, 2011.  She is the author of  Relocated, Geek Games,  Broken Bonds, and Rob’s Rebellion published by MuseItUp Publishing , and of Sand in the Desert, a collection of science fiction persona poems. A chapter book is due out later this year.

Links:

Rob’s Rebellion on Amazon:

http://www.amazon.com/Robs-Rebellion-Novels-Margaret-Fieland-ebook/dp/B0198UXBF8/

Rob’s Rebellion on publisher’s website:

https://museituppublishing.com/bookstore/index.php/series/robs-rebellion-detail

My Website:

http://www.margaretfieland.com/

Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/MargaretFielandAuthor/

Pinterest:

https://www.pinterest.com/margaretfieland/

Buy Links:

https://museituppublishing.com/bookstore/index.php/new-releases/series/robs-rebellion-detail

 

An Interview with Victoria Vane

HellOnHeels_hires (2)How did you get started writing?

I began writing the same way many people do—I woke up one day with a story in my head that wouldn’t go away. So I started writing it! I was 44 years old and working as an assistant director of Radiology for a hospital. At first I thought I was writing just to relieve stress and frustration from work. At the time I had a particularly stifling boss who later became a horrible boss in one of my books. LOL! I didn’t really see it going anywhere as I knew absolutely nothing about writing or publishing. Fourteen months later, however, I knew I had to see it through so I began writing query letter to try to get my book published. Six weeks later I got a book contract for my debut novel, THE HIGHEST STAKES, a work of historical fiction that was published in April 2010. I have learned a great deal since that book and have branched out into both historical and contemporary romance. Hell on Heels (Hotel Rodeo #1) is my seventeenth published title and I have eight more coming in 2016!

What genre(s) do you write in and why?

I began in historical fiction because I am a true blue history geek but I am also a romantic so all of my stories, both historical and contemporary have strong romantic elements. I also have a very naughty sense of humor that plays into a number of my stories. The Hotel Rodeo series, with its colorful Las Vegas setting has allowed me to give it full reign!

Tell us about your current series.

Hotel Rode is a smart & sexy, contemporary romance series set in contemporary Las Vegas. My hero is a former rodeo stock contractor who runs a hotel that’s seen better days. His dream is to rebuild the entire hotel and casino by offering exciting and unique entertainment that’s a blend of circus, rodeo, and gambling. When Ty manages to talk his billionaire business partner, Tom Brandt, into moving forward, disaster strikes and leaves Ty answering to Tom’s daughter, Monica, a New York investment banker. Although Ty and Monica don’t see eye to eye on anything, their attraction is combustible. The first two books in the series HELL ON HEELS and TWO TO WRANGLE, feature the war of wills between Ty and Monica, but the third book BEAUTY AND THE BULL RIDER features secondary characters who are only loosely connected to the hotel. I am currently working on five more books for this series. Each subsequent story will focus on a different couple but the hotel is always in the background.

Do you have critique partners?  No. I have never played well with others! LOL! Seriously, I just haven’t found anyone with whom I am compatible. I do, however, have several absolutely wonderful beta readers who have been invaluable to me.

What is your favorite dessert/food?  I love Italian and Mexican food. Hate anything bland!

How likely are people you meet to end up in your next book?  Don’t ever cross me! (Evil laugh).

HellonHeelsTour copyTell us about your hero.  Give us one of his strengths and one of his weaknesses.

Ty Morgan is a former rodeo stock contractor, bull rider and bull fighter. He’s hard-working, ambitious and charming, and loves women, but only in single servings—mainly because he’s been burned before. He’s also struggled in the past with alcohol abuse.

Tell us about your heroine.  Give us one of her strengths and one of her weaknesses.

Monica Brandt is a New York investment banker. She’s smart as hell and tough as nails, but under her hard exterior lies a tender heart. She’s fiercely loyal to Tom whish is why she distrusts Ty and is quick to jump to conclusions. She’s afraid he’s using her father for his own gain.

What’s next for you?  2016 is going to be a HUGE year for me as I have multiple releases in both contemporary and historical romance. In addition to my Hotel Rode series form Kensington, I have the 4th release in my Hot Cowboy Night series from Sourcebooks as well as a number of indie historical releases coming. Five of these are multi author collaborations (RING IN A COWBOY, ONCE UPON A TRUE LOVE’S KISS, PASSIONATE PROMISES, and SEVEN NIGHTS OF SIN.) And that’s only the first half of the year! I hope you all will take a moment to check out my work.

Warmest regards,

Victoria Vane

http://www.victoriavane.com

HELL ON HEELS (HOTEL RODEO #1) by VICTORIA VANE 

PLACE YOUR BET…The Hotel Rodeo in Las Vegas has seen better days, but managing partner Ty Morgan has come up with a way to return it to its former glory. His plan looks promising until the unthinkable happens. Suddenly Ty is working for the boss’s daughter. And Miss Monica Brandt, hot as she may be, doesn’t share his vision…

ROLL THE DICE...She left a fabulous career and a frustrated fiancé in New York to move to Vegas and save her father’s investment. But now Monica is locking horns with a sexy cowboy-turned-businessman. What does Ty think he can do that she can’t? All Monica knows is that she doesn’t dare trust him—or is it herself she doesn’t trust…

AND WIN…The battle lines are drawn. The stakes are high.  And the attraction can’t be denied—especially the more closely Ty and Monica have to work together. Some odds are just meant to be played, and with chemistry this electric, it may be time to grab life by the horns…

2015-09-18_18.22.16RESIZEDABOUT VICTORIA VANE

 Victoria Vane is a #1 bestselling award-winning author of smart and sexy romance. Her works range from comedic romps to emotionally compelling erotic romance and have received over twenty awards and nominations including: a 2015 Red Carpet Finalist for Best Contemporary romance (Slow Hand), 2014 RONE Winner for Best Historical Post Medieval Romance (Treacherous Temptations), and Library Journal Best Ebook Romance of 2012 (The Devil DeVere series). Victoria also writes romantic historical fiction as Emery Lee. She currently resides in Palm Coast, Florida with her husband, two sons, a little black dog, and an Arabian horse.

Contact info:

Email: victoria.vane@hotmail.com           Website: www.victoriavane.com

Blog: www.embracingromance.com         Facebook: http://on.fb.me/YVeXrf

Twitter: @authorvictoriav                       Pinterest: http://bit.ly/1vONQZh

Amazon: http://amzn.to/10QMKT5             Goodreads: http://bit.ly/1sccsM4

YOUTUBE: http://bit.ly/1yNtEMP

 

Praise for SLOW HAND
“Well-paced, scorching scenes and witty banter…”

Publishers Weekly

Slow Hand  by Victoria Vane is delightful, funny, page-turning steamy sexy, and the romance between Wade and Nikki make you wish you could pull Victoria’s characters straight off the page and into real life…”

—Unwrapping Romance

“For erotic passion and one-liners, the first book in Vane’s new series will satisfy…Vane’s latest gets a big yee-haw.”

RT Book Reviews

BUY LINKS:  AmazonB&NGoogle PlayKobo 

Rafflecopter Giveaway – Ebook Hell on Heels

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Interview with M K Schiller

image002What is your favorite part of writing? I love creating flawed, broken and funny characters and creating a unique set of circumstances for them. I especially love writing multi-cultural romances. There is an outcry for more diversity in the romance world. I’m thrilled to be a writer during this exciting time.

What is your least favorite part of writing? I have a difficult time juggling. A lot of writing is just that. It’s making time for edits. It’s spending hours on promotion, which is needed for every release. It’s dealing with budgets and covers and query letters. Also, examining the reviews of the book (or as I call it, fingernail biting time). By the way, reader responses are awesome when they are good. They encourage me to keep going knowing I’ve given people a few enjoyable hours with my characters. However, when they are bad, I have to take a deep breath, revaluate each book with fresh eyes, and find ways to make the next book even better. Oh yeah and speaking of the next book, you have to find time to write it! But I love being an author. It’s the best job I’ve ever had.

What is your next project and when will it be released?

Unwanted Girl is due out January 19th from Kensington Publishing. The story is about a girl from a rural village in India, who falls for a cynical, down and out, New York City author. These two have a whole world separating them, not to mention a ticking time-bomb since her student visa will expire in a few months. Both characters also have scarred pasts and heavy burdens that limit their views of a promising future. Yet, together, they learn to embrace life and experience true joy for the first time. Shyla, the heroine, wants to write a story, but she is no writer. Nick, although a seasoned successful writer, has lost his passion. The novel goes between the story they write and the life they are living. I’ve never attempted anything so outside the box. But then again, why limit yourself to a box at all?

What is your favorite dessert/food? I usually go for anything chocolate. The more chocolate, the better. I love bacon too. I know chocolate-covered bacon is actually a thing, but being a creature of addiction, I’m afraid to try it.

How likely are people you meet to end up in your next book? There is actually a second book coming out with Kensington next year. There might be a few surprise cameos.

Do you have a view in your writing space?  What does your space look like?   Funny story, I gave a friend of mine the royal tour of my house. When we got to my office, I announced ‘and this is where the magic happens.’ She gave me a sad nod and replied most people say that about their bedrooms!

Anyway, the view you ask? Well, right now, it’s piled with snow. The snow is drifting all across the driveway. I probably should think about shoveling it. Then again, I’m a writer, always on a deadline, dedicated to my work. See…I have almost as many excuses as plot elements!

My desk is very messy because I’m between promotion one book, editing another, and writing a third. I’ll admit I wouldn’t give you the grand tour of my writing space right about now.

Tell us about your hero.  Give us one of his strengths and one of his weaknesses.
Tell us about your heroine.  Give us one of her strengths and one of her weaknesses.

What genres are you drawn to as a reader?

I love romance of course. But there are so many subsets to that category. I read all genres, but my favorite books are the ones that pair two unlikely but loveable characters. I enjoy reading about people from different slices of life finding common ground. It’s the reason I choose to write multicultural romance. I believe we create our own barriers.

With technology, I’m seeing the world grow smaller every day. Instead of tolerating difference or worst ignoring them, we are embracing them. We need the same type of diversity represented in the romance world.

Do you have any words of inspiration for aspiring authors?

Take every compliment with humility and learn from every criticism. Both will make you a stronger writer.

UnwantedGirlTour copyBook Description or Synopsis

When a man loves a woman

Recovering addict Nick Dorsey finds solace in his regimented life. That is until he meets Shyla Metha.  Something about the shy Indian beauty who delivers take-out to his Greenwich Village loft inspires the reclusive writer. And when Shyla reveals her desire to write a book of her own, he agrees to help her. The tale of a young Indian girl growing up against a landscape of brutal choices isn’t Nick’s usual territory, but something about the story, and the beautiful storyteller, draws him in deep.

Shyla is drawn to Nick, but she never imagines falling for him. Like Nick, Shyla hails from a village, too…a rural village in India. They have nothing in common, yet he makes her feel alive for the first time in her life. She is not ready for their journey to end, but the plans she’s made cannot be broken…not even by him. Can they find a way to rewrite the next chapter?

This smoothly written cross-cultural romance, which initially appears uncomplicated, evolves into an in-depth study of strong emotions and underlying motivations. Schiller has a fine talent for describing cultural conflicts, and the characters are multifaceted and endearing. A truly unanticipated turn of events sends the riveting conclusion into overdrive, leaving readers breathless. – Publisher’s Weekly

author pic 5Author Bio –
I am a hopeless romantic in a hopelessly pragmatic world. I have a full time life and two busy teenagers, but in the dark of night, I sit by the warm glow of my computer monitor, and attempt to conjure up passionate heartwarming stories with plenty of humor.

I started imagining stories in my head at a very young age. In fact, I got so good at it that friends asked me to create plots featuring them as the heroine and the object of their affection as the hero. We’d spend hours on the phone while I came up with a series of unrealistic, yet tender events, which led to a satisfying conclusion. You’ve heard of fan fiction… this was friend fiction.

Even with that, it took many years to realize I could produce an actual full-length book that readers would enjoy. I try to make my stories humorous, realistic, with flawed but redeeming characters. I hope you enjoy my stories and always find The Happily Ever After in every endeavor.

MK SCHILLER

Author Links

Website – http://www.mkschillerauthor.com/

FB author page – https://www.facebook.com/MKSchillerauthor?ref_type=bookmark

FB personal Page – https://www.facebook.com/mk.schiller

Amazon Author page – http://www.amazon.com/MK-Schiller/e/B00FE0FGDM/ref=sr_ntt_srch_lnk_1?qid=1407492789&sr=8-1Twitter – https://twitter.com/MKSchillerGoodreads author page – https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/7223625.M_K_Schiller

Rafflecopter Giveaway – Ebook copy of Unwanted Girl
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An interview with Lori Sjoberg

Grave AttractionWhat is your favorite part of writing? – Finishing a book. The rush is indescribable!

What is your least favorite part of writing? – Writer’s block. It’s my brain’s way of telling me that something’s wrong with the story and I need to go back and figure out where I took a wrong turn.

Where do you get the ideas for your stories? – They come from all over the place: current events, conversations with friends, things that happen in real life, etc. You name it, I consider it fair game. LOL. The idea for the opening scene of Grave Attraction came from a conversation with one of my co-workers regarding my strange neighbor who lives a few houses away.

Do you have critique partners? – Yes, I’m very fortunate to have several critique partners, and they’re worth their weight in gold. They’re great at pointing out things that I’ve missed, as well as providing insight into areas I hadn’t even considered. Everything I write goes through them before it gets sent to my editor.

How likely are people you meet to end up in your next book? – Not very likely. Well, that’s not completely true. I have a tendency to borrow certain traits from people and incorporate them into my characters. So while they might not be an exact replica of someone I meet, they might share a few similarities.

Give us an elevator pitch for your book. – Reaper Adam Javorski breaks rule number one when he alters the course of fate to save the life of a sexy shifter. Little does he know, their souls share a bond that stretches across centuries. Now he’s forced to fight fate as well as a serial killer, or the next souls reaped will be theirs.

Tell us about your hero.  Give us one of his strengths and one of his weaknesses. – Adam is a reaper, a damned soul given one last chance to earn his salvation by harvesting the souls of the recently departed. The job sucks and the hours are long, but it sure as heck beats the alternative. Tall, dark, and handsome, he’s one of those guys who’s fairly laid back until somebody pushes him too far. Then watch out! He also has a bit of a control issue, which could pose a problem with everything that happens with Marlena…

Tell us about your heroine.  Give us one of her strengths and one of her weaknesses. – Marlena is a shifter who’s been alive for more than four hundred years. She’s smart, resourceful, and fiercely protective of those she loves, but over the years she’s lost her fire for living because of a tragedy that happened in her past. It’s going to take a special kind of hero to make her want to live again.

Do you prefer to read in the same genres you write in or do you avoid reading that genre? – I love reading paranormal romance, but I tend to avoid it when I’m writing a book. But once I type “The End” all bets are off!

What’s next for you? – 2016 is shaping up to be a busy year. First up is a contemporary romance trilogy that’s currently with my editor and should be coming out in the next couple months. I’ve also completed a contemporary romance short story that will be in an anthology set to release in February. After that, I have at least one more book in the Grave series to write, and I’m working on a brand new paranormal romance series that I’m really excited about! Finally, I’m collaborating on a paranormal romance serial with several other authors.

EXCERPT

“Who the hell are you?” Her husky voice sounded harder than iron, but her eyes were wide and unblinking.

Adam didn’t answer. He was too busy appraising the locks. With enough time and the proper equipment, he could override the electronic keypad. Unfortunately, he lacked the luxury of either. Besides, it wasn’t his business. As a reaper, his obligations lay with the dead. He had no right to interfere with the living. Those lessons had been drilled into his head countless times. Always collect your appointed souls. Do not alert humans to our presence. Do not question Fate. And for the love of God, do not alter destiny. His mentor’s words echoed in his ears, the only thing keeping him from running to his truck for a hacksaw.

Frustrated, Adam balled his hands into fists. If he had a lick of sense, he’d leave the house before he did anything stupid. But something about the young woman called out to his soul, tugging so fiercely he found it impossible to turn away. A deep sense of connection flashed through his blood—swift, strong, and given the situation, completely inappropriate. He’d never experienced anything like it, and it knocked him completely off balance.

His phone vibrated in his back pocket, jarring him from his thoughts.

“Get your ass out of there,” Martin said when Adam answered the call. “Your boy’s on his way back to the nest, and it looks like he brought company.”

Shit. According to his notes, the killer worked alone. Since when had he recruited a partner? “All right, I’ll be there in a minute.” Adrenaline surged through his veins as he disconnected. There wasn’t enough time to break the blond free. But what kind of man would he be if he left a defenseless woman in the hands of psychos? Fuck destiny. The least he could do was give her a fighting chance at survival. To the best of his knowledge, she wasn’t fated to expire any time soon, and in his book that made her fair game.

“Hey!” the blond shouted when he stormed out of the room, fear rising in her voice. “Come back! Let me out of here!”

The sound of the garage door opening shot Adam’s pulse into overdrive. With time running out, he rushed to the kitchen and grabbed the cordless phone from the charging station. He dialed as he walked, and by the time he reached the back room, a 911 operator had picked up the call.

“Please state the nature of your emergency,” a woman said on the other end of the line.

Adam shoved the phone through the narrow steel bars. His gaze locked with the woman’s long enough to insert a mental suggestion.

You’re at 816 Heron Cove. I was never here.

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About the Author:

Lori Sjoberg is the award winning author of the GRAVE SERIES. She lives in Florida with her husband and four-legged fur baby.

Growing up the youngest of three girls, Lori never had control of the remote. (Not that she’s bitter about that. Really. Okay, maybe a little, but it’s not like she’s scarred for life or anything.) That meant a steady diet of science fiction and fantasy. Star Trek, Star Wars, Twilight Zone, Outer Limits – you name it, she watched it. It fed her imagination, and that came in handy when the hormones kicked in and she needed a creative excuse for being out past curfew.

After completing her first novel, she joined the Romance Writers of America and Central Florida Romance Writers. Now she exercises the analytical half of her brain at her day job, and the creative half writing sensual paranormal romance. Grim reapers are her specialty, but she loves to write about all creatures of the night.

You can read more about Lori at http://lorisjoberg.com/

https://www.facebook.com/AuthorLoriSjoberg

@Lori_Sjoberg

https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6574214.Lori_Sjoberg

 

An interview with Eileen Dreyer

A Fine MadnessTell us a little about yourself and your latest book.

          As you may have guessed, I’m Eileen Dreyer. I’ve been writing since I was 10 and ran out of Nancy Drews to read, and I’ve been published since 1986. I’m up to 42 books and 10 short stories in just about every sub-genre of romance and medical-forensic suspense(I spent almost 2 decades as a trauma nurse, and I killed off everyone who annoyed me in my books) (yes, thank you. It was very satisfying). My proudest achievement in those years is earning only the 4th place in the Romance Writers of America Hall of Fame for excellence.

My first 25 romances were written as Kathleen Korbel(the reasons why are answered in a subsequent question). Now that I have the rights to most of them back, I’m republishing them under my own name. I don’t want anybody to be confused into thinking these are brand new books, so both names are on the cover.      A FINE MADNESS, published in 1991, is one of those books. I’m releasing it again in a group of 5 books that are all more humorous. It’s the story of a historic home restorer who is being invaded by a corporate security officer whose job it is to check the stately home for security leaks, just in case, oh, I don’t know, the queen of England should be expected at a secret meeting there. The problem is that Quinn Rutledge, who is hip deep in plaster and sanders, has no idea exactly why Ian Matthews is looking over her shoulder, nor that he is actually the Viscount Giggleswick(I couldn’t help it. I knew I had to write about a Lord Giggleswick when we stumbled over the town in Yorkshire), who not only works for the company that is turning stately homes into high end hotels, but that he will one day inherit it.

You’d think that information would ease his way into her heart. But Quinn has trust issues because of an ex-husband cut in the same mold, and Ian can’t bend enough to trust Quinn with the real details of  his life, that he isn’t just a viscount, but a member of her majesty’s security service. Throw in some good old fashioned English eccentrics, a very active ghost, a threat of eco-terrorism, and a retired military colonel straight out of Rudyard Kipling, and I hope you have a recipe for good old fashioned fun.

Oh, and just to keep the confusion to a minimum, after much consideration, I kept the book in 1991. The advent of technology would have changed too much.

 Tell us about your hero.  Give us one of his strengths and one of his weaknesses.

Ian Matthews, Viscount Giggleswick, comes from a classic aristocratic family. But much to his family’s chagrin, after his service in the army, he joins the Queen’s security branch, which is what brings him to Hartley Hall in Cornwall. He is an honorable man, adaptable and obviously courageous. His weaknesses include a very bum leg that is frustrating him beyond endurance, a conviction that it is only his title that attracts people, and a disbelief in ghosts—which actually might be his most problematic.

.Tell us about your heroine.  Give us one of her strengths and one of her weaknesses.

 Quinn Rutledge is an American with a passion for old houses. Hartley Hall is not the first stately home she has renovated and opened for the Early of Hartley. Detail-oriented and thorough, she is also a good friend, excellent boss and has patience with ghosts(a plus on this job). Her weaknesses include the fact that as an orphan she has never felt as if she belonged anywhere, a vulnerability strengthened by an unfortunate marriage into another aristocratic family, although of the American variety that left her divorced and bitter.

 Do you write under a pen name?   Why or why not?

I have written under a pen name, for two reasons. I’ve always known that I wanted to write in a lot of genres. I read a lot of genres. But back in 1986 when I was first published, romance writers were really looked down on, and I was afraid that I would be unfairly judged when I wrote in other genres. In fact, when I wrote my first suspense, `A MAN TO DIE FOR in 1991, my review included the line, “Romance writer Eileen Dreyer is trying to write suspense now” as if, ‘isn’t that cute?’ I’ve always been damned proud of my romances, and I didn’t want people dumping on me or them. So until the world began to accept romance writers as equals, I separated myself out.

The second reason is much easier. When my daddy learned that I was writing romances, he became very nervous. He just wasn’t sure he wanted people to know that his little girl(because you know you’re only ever 12 years old to your daddy) was writing about….well, you know, sex. So for him I took on another name. And even though, as I said, I’m very proud of Kathleen Korbel, I’ve decided to retire her and only use my own name now.

 What genres are you drawn to as a reader?

Absolutely everything. Nancy Drew really started me off into the land of mystery and suspense, followed by Mary Stewart, who taught me what a romantic suspense was. My mom introduced me to the big historical writers like James Clavell and James Michener. I’m the one who discovered M.M. Kaye, who inspired a lifelong fascination with exotic locals. J.R.R. Tolkien introduced me to fantasy, and I attended a great high school that gave me a great introduction to literature. So…yeah. Everything. It actually wasn’t until I was a mom and an RN before I discovered good romance. A friend gave me a shopping bag full of American authors like Nora Roberts, Roberta Gellis, Jayne Krentz, Joan Wolf. It was, if you’ll pardon the expression, love at first sight. Which means that you’ll find all the other genres in my romances, as well as other genres I’ve written.

 Do you or have you belonged to a writing organization?  Which one?  Have the helped you with your writing?  How?

 I do. I’ve belonged to Missouri Romance Writers of America since 1986, but at one time or another I’ve also belonged to Mystery Writers of America, Sisters in Crime, Writers Guild and Author’s Guild and Novelists Inc. My guild memberships are for protection and information. The others are my writing community.

When I teach writing, it is the first thing that I emphasis. You can do without almost anything else to become a successful author. I don’t believe you can do without a writing community. It isn’t just learning skills and networking. It’s being with other people who understand your passion, craft and problems. I liken it to being another new mother. Nobody else understands just how hard it is or the time it takes. One of the most difficult things to explain is why I’m lying on the couch with my eyes closed, and that’s working. Other authors know, though, and might offer some tips on how to maximize your creative time.

Will you share some encouraging words for authors still struggling for that first contract? 

 I’ll tell you a true story. Way back in 1981 I was working the ER, married, raising two kids and working to finish my bachelor’s of science. And I was so frustrated, because I wanted so badly to do something creative. And then,  one night a friend of mine and I were standing out on the hospital parking lot at 3 in the morning, she  challenged me to write a book. She’s the one who gave me the bag of romances to read. And I took up that challenge. And like I said, I’m now working on my 43rd book. My friend? She never finished her first book. Why? Because somebody told her she wasn’t a good writer. What’s the difference between the two of us? I didn’t let anybody tell me no. It took me five years to get published, which has been the average. It wasn’t exactly easy after that, either. I’ve fought for every contract, every book. But I didn’t let them tell me no.

The greatest difference now is that traditional publishing isn’t your only choice. You can go indie. My only caveat to that is that an awful lot of writers have thought they could just put anything up on line and make a fortune. The demands on writers are even tougher in indie than traditional publishing, because you’re the one who has to do all the trouble-shooting. You can rely on professional editors at a publishing house to help you catch mistakes and polish your prose. But you’re the one who has to find the right editor, the right cover artist, the right distributor. But if you want this, you’ll find a way.

What movie best describes your life?  Why?

 It’s a Wonderful Life. Oh, I have problems. Doesn’t everybody? But I’m doing what I love, my family is happy and healthy. What else can you ask for?

 FineMadnessTour copy (1)What is your next project and when will it be released?

 Well, A FINE MADNESS is the last book of the first group of Korbel Classics I’m rereleasing. The next series, my romantic suspense series, will debut this year. I’m also continuing my DRAKE’S RAKES Regency series of what I call historical romantic adventure(nefarious spies are involved),with Pippin’s and Beau’s story, THREE TIMES A LADY. And if that weren’t enough, I’m working on my first non-fiction book, TRAVELS WITH DAVE: WHAT A PASSPORT, PILL BOTTLE AND SUNGLASSES TAUGHT ME ABOUT LIFE, DEATH AND FRIENDSHIP.

To find out more about all of them, check my website(you can sign up for a newsletter) www.eileendreyer.com, my FB page, www.facebook.com/eileendreyer, or twitter (okay, and Instagram and Pinterest).

Thanks again for asking me to come play. I really hope you like Quinn and Ian.

 A Fine Madness by Eileen Dreyer

Blurb

Quinn Rutledge has been hired to remodel historic Hartley Hall into a 5-star hotel.

Ian Matthews, a Special Forces officer in the Queen’s Protection service, is vetting the hall’s security for a secret international meeting, and presents himself to Quinn as a corporate officer checking on her progress.

All seems simple enough, until the pair uncover a crazed band of terrorists, a destructive ghost with an odd sense of humor, and an inconvenient attraction to each other.

Neither have time for love, and Ian is the embodiment of everything that went wrong with Quinn’s first marriage. But Love doesn’t care.

 Available at:

Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Madness-Korbel-Classic-Romance-Humorous-ebook/dp/B017X5GOBI/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1452020968&sr=8-1&keywords=a+fine+madness+eileen+dreyer

Barnes & Noble http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/a-fine-madness-eileen-dreyer/1123024927?ean=9781614178002

Kobo https://store.kobobooks.com/en-us/ebook/a-fine-madness-korbel-classic-romance-humorous-series-book-5

GooglePlay https://play.google.com/store/books/details/Eileen_Dreyer_A_Fine_Madness_Korbel_Classic_Romanc?id=q5sACwAAQBAJ

Bio

New York Times bestselling, RWA Hall of Fame author Eileen Dreyer has published 31 romance novels in most genres, 8 medical­forensic suspenses, and 10 short stories.

2016 sees Eileen enjoying critical acclaim for her foray into historical romance, the Drake’s Rakes series, which Eileen labels as Regency Romantic Adventure that follows a group of Regency aristocrats who are willing to sacrifice everything to keep their country safe. She is also working on her first non­fiction book, TRAVELS WITH DAVE, about a journey she’s been taking with a friend’s ashes.

A retired trauma nurse, Eileen lives in her native St. Louis with her husband, children, and

large and noisy Irish family, of which she is the reluctant matriarch. She has animals but refuses to subject them to the limelight.

Website: eileendreyer.com

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/EileenDreyer

Twitter: @eileendreyer

 

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An Interview with Nancy Morse

Beneath an Iron SkyWhat genre(s) do you write in and why?

I write historical, contemporary and paranormal romance. Although I write in several historical genres, the one dearest to my heart is Native American. I’ve been immersed in Native American history and culture for years and am particularly proud of my collection of 19th century artifacts. I love running my hands over the beadwork and the worn hide and sinew. They speak to me of a bygone era when the proud buffalo-hunting tribes roamed wild and free on the Great Plains. BENEATH AN IRON SKY is my latest homage to the Lakota people.

What is your next project and when will it be released?

RESTLESS WIND, Book 3 in my Native American Wild Wind Series, will hopefully be released in the spring of 2016. This series, that began with WHERE THE WILD WIND BLOWS and followed up with WINTER WIND, tells the story of Katie McCabe, a trader’s daughter, and Black Moon, an Oglala warrior, as they fight for their love and the land of their birth.

What is your typical day like:

For me, there’s no such thing as a routine. I try to get to the computer by 7:00 AM, before the dog starts whining for his morning walk, to check my sales figures, email, Facebook, and do a little tweeting. After walking the demanding beast, I’ll grab a quick breakfast and settle down for a few hours of writing, Three days a week I hit the gym for an hour, then usually kick back at 2:00 each day to watch General Hospital (I’m a sucker for the residents of Port Charles). The rest of the time I do my writing in between running errands, and going out to lunch with my husband. We’re both retired, so we eat out a lot. Unless the writing is going like gangbusters, and then nothing else gets done…except for the dog, who waits for no one. I’m usually working on 2 books at once. This way, if I run into a block on one, I can switch to the other.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

It’s been a game-changer for me. I was traditionally published for years with Silhouette, Pocket Books, Dell and Meteor. Then I sort of hit a brick wall. My proposals were selling, so I decided to go it alone. It was the best decision I ever made. I’m not a control freak by nature, but I must admit I like being the one who decides everything about my books – covers, venues, prices, and most of all, content. Ironically, my best selling self-published book is the one I was told by editors would never sell. And after years of contractual deadlines, there’s something liberating about not having any. Now when I write, it’s because I want to, not because I have to.

Tell us about your hero.

Crow Eagle is a Lakota man who was raised at a time when the Sioux wars were over and the people were being moved onto reservations. His experiences as a youth at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania brought into sharp focus the reality of his people’s eroding way of life. His strength comes from his pride in his culture. His weakness is Del, the white woman who forces him to question his actions and examine his motives.

What inspired your latest book?

As a member of my community History Club, I was asked to give a presentation on women’s rights and the 19th Amendment. I took everything I learned about the women’s suffrage movement, and everything I know and love about the Lakota people, and wove a tale of two people fighting for their rights.

Tell us about your book 

In 1880 eleven-year-old Philadelphia (Del) Stratton meets fifteen-year-old Crow Eagle, a rebellious Lakota boy, at the Carlisle Indian School in Pennsylvania where her father is an instructor. Wrenched from his people on the reservation and brought to Carlisle to become Americanized, the reluctant but deep bond the belligerent boy forms with the idealistic young girl is severed when he returns to his people. Nine years later they are reunited when Del’s fight for suffrage takes her to Dakota Territory on the verge of statehood. There, Crow Eagle, now a strong warrior, is waging battle to keep his people’s hope alive through the Ghost Dance. And the friendship that began years earlier blossoms into a forbidden love that will not be denied.

What do you have planned for the future?

After RESTLESS WIND, I’m planning a 5-part western novella series about the Kincaid boys. I’m hoping to get the series released by late 2016. Of course, that will mean spending every waking moment writing, with little time left for eating and sleeping. After that, I’ll tackle Book 3 in my paranormal Soul Searchers Series. And then Book 4 in the Wild Wind Series. That should take me well into 2017. I’m already tired just thinking about it all.

 

BENEATH AN IRON SKY buy links:

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B019BGILAE

Smashwords: https://smashwords.com/books/view/600211

Apple: https://geo.itunes.apple.com/us/book/beneath-an-iron-sky/id1068291283?mt=11

Barnes & Noble: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/beneath­an­iron­sky­nancy­morse/1123141168?ean=2940152522440

Kobo: http://www.kobobooks.com/search/search.html?q=9781310758188

In print: https://www.createspace.com/5933011

Author links:

Website: http://www.nancymorse.com

Facebook: http://www.Facebook.com/NancyMorseAuthor

Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/author/nancymorse

Twitter: @NancyMorse

Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/ntmorse

Author photo 1735Bio:

Nancy Morse is an award-winning author of 23 contemporary, historical, and paranormal romance novels, as well as non-fiction books. She’s a New York transplant living in Florida. Married for 48 years to her childhood sweetheart, she jokes that they met sometime between the discovery of fire and the invention of the wheel. They share their home with a big, beautiful, bossy Alaskan Malamute who thinks they were put on this earth to serve him…and he’d be right. She enjoys dining out, art and antique shows, watching old movies on TV, reading, and writing, especially romance, because love is always an adventure.

An Interview with Sara Walter Ellwood

Heartsong_2400x1600How did you get started writing?

I started writing in high school when I wrote my first novel—a historical romance set during the Civil War. I took a long break while I went to college and started my family, but about ten years ago, I got back into it when I began to write Star Wars fan fiction. I wrote my first published book in 2009. It was published in 2012.

What genre(s) do you write in and why?

Right now, I’m published in both paranormal and contemporary western romance—all of my novels have some suspense subplot. Lord only knows why I chose these genres! I tell people they chose me…LOL  I wrote my first paranormal after reading my first vampire series—the Twilight books. I started writing westerns when I came up with my hero in Heartstrings, a country singer. It just seemed logical he’d be from Texas. I started reading westerns after I stared writing my story. My current work-in-progress is a Scottish Highlander historical. I also have an idea for a science fiction romance that I’d love to write someday. So who knows how many genres I’ll end up writing. I will write anything that I enjoy reading.

Tell us about your current series.

Singing to the Heart is my latest three-book series. Each book is a standalone novel, although book 1 and 3 are directly tied to each other. The first book Heartstring, first came out a couple of years ago and I knew I always wanted to write the hero and heroine’s daughter’s story someday, which is told in my June 2016 release Heartland. I tied my current release, Heartsong, to the series by making the heroes best friends in the music business. All the books have similar themes of coming home, self-discovery, and making amends. There is also a child/children involved in each story. In Heartstrings, Seth Kendall—a mega famous superstar country singer—comes home to his Texas Panhandle hometown for his father’s funeral and decides to make things right with this fourteen-year-old daughter. In Heartsong, Gabe McKenna comes home after his father and his father’s much younger wife are killed in a plane crash to fight for custody of his ten-year-old half-brother. In the third book, Heartland, country-pop mega star Emily Kendall returns home to rebuild her life after finding out she’s pregnant while in re-hab for her drug addiction.

What inspired your latest book?

Heartsong came to me out of a brainstorming exercise. I got the idea of Gabe’s ex-wife from the tabloid news of a country singer who divorced his much older manager wife. I knew I wanted to write a marriage-first type of story and wanted a child somehow involved. From these seeds grew the story of Heartsong.

What is your favorite part of writing?

The revision/editing process… I love polishing my story until it shines.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

Writing the first draft! Sometimes I really hate this part. Which probably would be resolved some if I could just learn to plot…LOL Yeah, I’m a pantser.

What are you currently working on?

I’m doing research for a Highlander historical romance. I plan to start writing in February.

What do you have planned for the future?

I hope to have the historical romance finished and start shopping it off to agents this fall/winter. I also have some contemporary westerns I’d like to write this year.

Heartsong

Singing to the Heart Book 2

by

Sara Walter Ellwood

Releasing January 5, 2015 in both ebook and print

Blurb:

Gabriel McKenna is living the dream. A rising country music star he’s no stranger to fame, money, or beautiful women. Despite his bad boy image, he’s also got a heart of gold, and when his ten-year-old brother is orphaned, he wants to take him under his wing. But the judge on the case is less than impressed by Gabe’s reputation and awards custody to the grandfather Gabe knows firsthand is abusive.

Michaela Finn is no stranger to heartache. Years ago she was engaged to Gabe McKenna, but two days before their wedding he ran off to Nashville with a female talent scout. Now Gabe is back in her life with an insane plan. Marry him, so he can get custody of his younger brother. Michaela can’t bear to think of any child being hurt, but she’s just not sure her heart can carry a happy tune when Gabe is playing lead…

Excerpt:

“Okay.” Michaela breathed the word.

“You’ll marry me?” Gabe didn’t bother hiding his surprise.

She drained her glass with a wince. “Damn, I’ve never liked champagne.” Michaela headed for the fridge. “Do you have any beer in here?”

He was more uncertain now than he’d been before he started thinking about this crazy idea. “Yeah. Lone Star. Get me one, too.” When she turned with the longneck bottles in hand, he chuckled. “A two hundred dollar bottle of fine French bubbly, but we’d rather drink Texas beer.”

“I’m a country girl, Gabe. You’ve always known that.” She handed him one of the

bottles. “I’ve actually been thinking the same thing–that if I were married the judge would’ve given me Jesse. But the only man I can think of is Cash Nelson.” She twisted the top off the beer and took a long draw. “But he would read too much into the agreement. I never considered you. Hell, the whole town knows I can’t even stand you. How is this gonna work?”

Gabe didn’t like the way his heart pinched at her words. He tossed the cap from his beer beside hers on the island top and took a drink. “We’ll have to convince them otherwise. We have a history and we’ve been working together”–he grinned as he remembered the custody hearing– “or against each other for weeks now. Everyone knows there’s a fine line between love and hate.”

 Buy Links:

Kensington: http://www.ekensingtonbooks.com/author.aspx/29486
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Heartsong-Book-Sara-Walter-Ellwood-ebook/dp/B00VZZM6A6/

Barnes and Noble: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/heartsong-sara-walter-ellwood/1121727126?ean=9781601834928

iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/sara-walter-ellwood/id576508680?mt=11

Kobo: https://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/heartsong-11

 Bio:

Although Sara Walter Ellwood has long ago left the farm for the glamour of the big town, she draws on her experiences growing up on a small hobby farm in West Central Pennsylvania to write her contemporary westerns. She’s been married to her college sweetheart for over 20 years, and they have two teenagers and one very spoiled rescue cat named Penny. She longs to visit the places she writes about and jokes she’s a cowgirl at heart stuck in Pennsylvania suburbia. Sara Walter Ellwood is a multi-published and international Amazon bestselling author of the anthology set Cowboy Up. She also publishes paranormal romantic suspense under the pen name Cera duBois.

 Author Links:

Website: http://www.sarawalterellwood.com

Blog: http://www.sarawalterellwood.com/blog/

Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/sarawalterellwood.ceradubois/

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/sara_w_ellwood

Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6869635.Sara_Walter_Ellwood

HeartsongTour copyThe other books in Singing to the Heart…

Heartstrings, Book 1 is now available and Heartland, Book 3 is available for pre-order

Heartstrings: Amazon:  http://www.amazon.com/Heartstrings-Heartsong-Book-Walter-Ellwood-ebook/dp/B00IGFX7BA/

Heartland: Amazon:  http://www.amazon.com/Heartstrings-Heartsong-Book-Walter-Ellwood-ebook/dp/B00IGFX7BA/

For other links and book information check out my website page: https://sarawalterellwood.wordpress.com/singing-to-the-heart/

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An Interview with Jacintha Topaz

BlackStormPackSkidLightningFrontCoverAReHow did you get started writing?

Frankly, I began writing because my characters were stalking me. They haunted me everywhere until I put fingers to keyboard and finally put their stories down. I’m a pantser all the way and only accepted that process of creation (as opposed to plotting) when I finally let go and began to trust my characters. If anything feels off in the story, I dig deep and bide my time until I get it right with a character-driven, character-sourced plot. I never know how the story will turn out, how A gets to Z. I only know that I’ll get to Z, which is the Happy For Now (HFN) or Happily Ever After (HEA).

What genre(s) do you write in and why?

I write LGBT new adult, sci-fi, paranormal shifter and erotic romance with kinky elements. These characters fascinate me, because I never know how they will clash and how the sparks will fly. Yes, it has to be romance, because the story is about how the characters grow in strength and in love and become a positive magnetic force that is greater than themselves.

I find writing about LGBT characters with partiality to BDSM an interesting blend because fiction is about exploring the edges of reality and realism, fantasy and fancy. Eroticism is also a double-edged sword. It’s a touch-and-taboo topic, where women are supposed to know enough to be sexy but not too much so they won’t show up as slutty. Writing erotic romance is about giving permission for us to explore these borders. I encounter a lot of creative license to play with identity issues, especially when the fictional couples explore kink—fetish, role play, and more. Like I said before, the characters fascinate me.

Tell us about your current series.

I’m in the midst of three concurrent projects:

One of my projects, The Miseducation, is a spinoff serial of the Purr Billionaire BDSM Trio serial, which features a bisexual female awakening to her sexuality, a standoffish lesbian Dominatrix, and a heterosexual alpha male Dominant. First slated as a five-part serial, it ended up being six parts. The first part, Purr Scent I: The Meeting, is free at all retail sites. The Miseducation travels back in time and will cover how the lesbian Domme came into being.

Another of my projects springs out of the DykeLove Quickies set of short stories and features F/F sparks on the road. Kicking off this next incarnation of DykeLove is The Invitation, in which a dancer from the tropical island of Guam is recruited to star in a show by a kinky artistic director in the U.S. mainland.

Finally, I had debuted an M/M werewolf story entitled Skid in a holiday anthology in 2015. Skid is the first book (a prequel) in the Black Storm Pack series. (You can scroll down for an excerpt.) I found it enjoyable to write from Skid’s perspective. The project I’m working on in that series is now from Alpha’s perspective.

Aside from the three concurrent projects I’ve been working on, the two series that are on the back burner (aka stalled) star a bisexual female college freshman in modern times named Sy (Bi Girls Do It series) and a transgender man in a futuristic sci-fi space opera setting named Vaughn (Man X Chronicles series).

 What is your favorite part of writing?

My favorite part of writing is immersing in the character’s world and trying my darnedest to get it right on the computer screen. It’s a satisfying feeling when I find the right word choice after grasping at air. Even more satisfying is being able to type The End. Most satisfying of all is clicking the Publish button to get the book live and direct to readers. That’s the most amazing feeling—birthing a book.

 What is your least favorite part of writing?

My least favorite part of writing is getting writer’s block. My version of writer’s block is being stumped, stupefied or mystified by my characters’ actions and having to give them the time off to work things out. That time off happens to be indefinite, no matter how frustrating it can feel.

Instead of pressuring myself to bulldoze through a story as I had before, I’d pick up from where I left off on a different story until I’ve gained sufficient insight on the first story to flesh it out more. To dance between multiple stories in a short period of time (fondly coined as “schizophrenic”) is quite taxing on the nerves.

As an indie author, I have self-imposed deadlines that I’ve never quite been able to meet because of the unforeseen duration I’ve taken off from a particular story. At the same time, it is nice to be indie because I don’t have to stick to any particular official release date schedule.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

Self-publishing has never been more accessible and acceptable than it is today. It’s been about two years since I began dedicating time and space to write. After dabbling with a few M/F stories, the kinky LGBT characters sprang up and hit me like a brick in April 2014. I hadn’t wanted to approach traditional publishers, small press or e-publishers because I wasn’t sure how the material would be received. I went with indie because I wanted real-time feedback from customers, readers, on the stories.

I’m pleased with the results so far. What began as zero income in my first month of publication (April 2014) increased to a one-digit income in May 2014, a two-digit income in July 2014, and a three-digit income in December 2014. Since then, I’ve averaged a low three-digit income figure per month. In 2016, I look forward to breaking into a higher three-digit monthly income bracket.

What advice do you have for other authors wanting to self-publish?

Currently, I’ve got three tenets for the indie author newbie: (1) Go Write. (2) Go Broad. (3) Go Tell.

ON WRITING: Write. Write. Write. Books are the best promotion for all the other books you’ve written and will write. If you’ve got little time and energy to do much else, then focus on the writing. Generate the content and the consumers will find you.

If you’re not sure about your writing, then read a lot in your genre and beyond. Notice what kinds of covers, stories, etc attract and repel you. Learn from other authors and apply to your own book. The most important thing? Write. Do the work.

A corollary to this tenet is to do what you excel in. Hopefully, you know that it’s your unique way of spinning a story that wins you readers. That means leave the professional stuff to others: editing, cover design, etc.

However, if you’ve got design experience, you can get your own stock images to make book covers or your own ads. Among the free trials I’ve tried, Bigstock has the best deal right now – 70 free images (5/day for 14 days). They take down your credit card at entry so they can bill 3 days in advance of the trial’s end date. So if you cancel, be sure to do so three days before. The Standard License allows you to use the images as cover art for up to 250,000 sales of your book. Thereafter, you can purchase the Extended License or switch to a fresh image, if you feel so inclined.

ON GOING BROAD: Even though it may be a huge learning curve at the very beginning, I wholeheartedly encourage you to publish direct to the five major online retailers (Amazon, Apple/iBooks, Barnes and Noble/Nook, Kobo, and Google Play*) because you’ll be able to keep the royalties, the reviews, and the sales rankings without having to start from scratch if you’ve gone through a middle man (an aggregator).

*If Google Play is not currently accepting publishers, then you can go through Pronoun for now, as they currently do not take a royalty cut after the retail site (e.g., Google Play) takes theirs for hosting your product on their site.

About Aggregators: To reach other markets that may at first generate little to insignificant sales numbers, you can go through an aggregate such as Smashwords or Draft2Digital, both of which take a 10% cut from post-retail royalties. Yes, they do distribute to iBooks, BN, and Kobo. So if you want to buy yourself some time by doing one upload instead of several before you’ve gotten the hang of it, then by all means distribute through them first.

ON TELLING: Even if you have no idea when you’ll actually self-publish your own book, it’s best to build your list of people who love what you have to tell them. A lot of email marketing programs are free up to a 2000-subscriber limit. A popular choice is MailChimp. You can stick the newsletter sign-up form in your bio, your email signature, your website, your cards, and so forth even if you have nothing published yet. Building your list is the best way to start building a platform, a following that may one day be huge enough to land you on a bestselling list in the preorder phase. Yes, dream big. Start small. Start somewhere.

Do you have a view in your writing space?  What does your space look like? 

LOL. If you only saw my writing space! It’s a disaster. The only space I have on my desk for writing is the space reserved for my computer. Almost every inch otherwise is … well, occupied. I’m not even going to start listing the bizarre array of contents. Given that, it’s a miracle that I actually get any writing done. Such is the life of a stay-at-home mother who’s still nursing her youngest child.

The most important thing about a writing space is that there is space. Second to that is the time you take to write. When you establish a routine that works for you, you set yourself up for success. When it comes down to writing, the only things that matter are time and space and committing the time and space. 🙂

So yeah, I’m not going to tell you how the rest of my writing space looks like. I can sum that up in one

word: cluttered.

Do you prefer to read in the same genres you write in or do you avoid reading that genre? Why?

I try to read different genres to stretch my mind. I read within my genre to keep up-to-date. That being said, I actually don’t have that much time to read. There are a lot of awesome authors with great works out there that I haven’t even read because I’m strapped for time. So the little time I do have to read I regard it as a luxury.

In fact, that’s my kind of vacation—sit back or lay down and read. As long as I have a book or an ebook in hand, I can be anywhere. In fact, I like being domestic. Why travel somewhere when I’ve got all the conveniences at my fingertips and within walking distance? I don’t need to drive or fly anywhere. All I need to do to escape into another world is have the book in hand.

Do you have any words of inspiration for aspiring authors?

Believe in yourself, your work, and your ability to deliver it consistently. Have a blast!

 

Without further ado, here is the blurb, followed by an excerpt, to my latest release: Skid, a gay paranormal werewolf shapeshifter erotic romance in the Black Storm Pack series.

Alpha finds a mate in the most unlikely man and place

At thirteen, Skid knew he needed to leave his government subsidy-sucking foster family under the cover of dark. Caught in a forest fire as an arson suspect by a werewolf pack, Skid comes face to face with Alpha. Two questions—that’s all it takes for Alpha to take Skid under his wings until the fateful day Skid turns eighteen.

Chapter One

A faint stir in the woodlands wind made Skid hug his winter jacket even closer to his skin. The bitter chill had him hiss out a breath into the air just before he licked his bottom lip.

Damn. Wrong move. The moisture left his lip to sting in the harsh cold. He wished he’d thought of packing chapstick, a scarf, and mittens. He huddled further into his jacket and willed the freeze to depart from his ears, his cheeks, his waist, his jeans, and every place that creaked of icicles in his body.

When he’d left that dark early morning, he had high hopes of crossing several county lines to get as far away as he could from the Denver cityscape. He’d known to go north before he headed west, just in case people were looking for him. He hadn’t made it easy, though, because he had hot-wired someone’s motorbike to go north before hot-wiring another bike to go west. He’d abandoned that second vehicle by the side of a main road before hiking off into a rural area. Not long after, he chanced about these thick woodlands.

Now he wished he’d kept at least one of those motorbikes for convenience of travel as well as for a possible windbreak. He huddled closer to the base of the tree for some measure of relief, only to find none. Worse, another breeze swept past him, carrying the scent of—

“Smoke!” His eyes fluttered open disbelievingly. Had he dreamt it? He took another whiff. No, he wasn’t mistaken. He glanced around and saw that in the far horizon a huge inferno of glowing orange spewed thick clouds of smoke that licked and fused with the dark skies. He snapped upright to gain a sense of reference, but the moonlight he’d seen previously was now fully obliterated by the hovering carcinogenic blanket.

Damn. He’d need to get away from the wooded areas—fast. If only he could recall exactly how he’d arrived at the base of this tree, then he’d know which route to flee upon. No time to ponder. Every second was precious.

So Skid got to his feet and retrieved his minimalist gear—a backpack with a basic DIY first aid kit along with several days’ supply of granola bars, a serving size pack of his favorite hard candies and several pouches of water. Then he ambled with the aid of his flashlight to find his way out.

Although the fire was distant enough, the wind was picking up and blowing even more of the smoke in his direction. If he didn’t make a move on it, then his vision—not just his lungs—would be further compromised.

Vying with the crackling of the wood and the roar of the fire were the cacophonous calls of wildlife scrambling for exit routes. As the sound of fleeing animals neared all around him, Skid realized that he might have another thing to fear: carnivores.

Then again, what creature would want to eat him in the midst of its own flight? Surely, even if he was mauled to death, the fire would finish him off. No animal would come back to reclaim the dead meat; it’d be gone.

Right?

Lost in thought as he scrambled over twigs, soil, and dry leaves, he wondered if he’d split his latest foster home at a wise time. The greedy suckers had taken their monthly stipend—subsidies that were supposed to care for him—and then split for summer vacation without him. He’d thought he’d have a head start by running away the day after they’d left for their month-long trip to the Bahamas.

A snarl at his left stopped him in his tracks. A similar sound came at his right. Ten O’Clock and Two O’Clock were closing in. Skid took one step back and a growl came at his eight o’clock at the very same time a huff came at his four o’clock.

Damn. He was surrounded.

SKID (BLACK STORM PACK BOOK 1 PREQUEL)
is available at these online retail sites:

Amazon  |  Apple  |  Barnes and Noble  |  Google Play  |  Kobo  |  Nook UK  |  Smashwords  |  All Romance eBooks

JacinthaTopaz150x150Jacintha Topaz is the author of Purr Erotica Romance, devoted to F/F, M/M, LGBT, Menage and More BDSM erotic romance reads. When inspired, she’s on permanent deadline. When not writing, she can be found indulging in cashews and kefir and her secret love of armchair gardening. For exclusive news and specials on forthcoming releases, sign up for her newsletter: http://eepurl.com/R9OfH

You can find Jacintha on Facebook, Goodreads, Twitter and her Website Blog. Her books are available on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, Google Play, iBooks, Kobo, Smashwords, and other fine retail sites.

An Interview with Mackenzie Crowne

ToWinHerTrust1000x666How did you get started writing?

Ha! It’s funny, considering my current series is sports romance, but I think I was ten when I wrote my first story about a boy who dreamed of becoming a hockey star. Just don’t ask me where it is. I have a hard enough time remembering where my cell phone is.

What is your favorite part of writing?

I’m a total pantser, and love those moments when a character reveals a detail or element I didn’t see coming.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

See my previous answer. As a pantser, I often don’t have a clue where the story is going. As you can imagine, that can be quite daunting, especially when I have a deadline looming.

What is your typical day like?

I’m an early riser and with cup of coffee in hand, I open my laptop to begin my day. Email and the day’s promotional tasks come first. Some days that means several hours. I hate those days because I can’t give the WIP the five to six hours I try to maintain. I’m usually toast by mid-afternoon and don’t normally do a lot of writing after three. Unless I’m chasing a deadline, then all bets are off. Somewhere in there I fit in all the real life stuff.

Do you have critique partners?

I have three fabulous critique partners, AJ Nuest, Kelly Moran, and Vonnie Davis. All three are incredibly talented authors who have talked me down from the ledge on numerous occasions. Seriously. I couldn’t survive without them, and our association comes with some rockin’ fringe benefits. First and foremost is their friendship. This business is a solitary one and having friends around you who understand the ups and downs of a writer’s world makes all the difference. Second, when I say they are talented, that’s an understatement. My greedy reader’s heart skips a beat each time one of their chapters arrives in my inbox. I can’t tell you how often I’ve sent back a file with a sigh and a serious case of writer envy.

getPartDo you have a view in your writing space?  What does your space look like?

I just happen to have a picture of my office. I recently spent an entire day mucking out the random stuff stored in there. I swear, my family thinks it’s a storage closet, but it’s clean now and I’m amazed at how nice it is to write in a clutter-free environment. You can’t tell from the pic, but the view through the window is a peaceful one of the pool and swaying palms in my back yard.

Tell us about your hero.  Give us one of his strengths and one of his weaknesses.

Hmmm how do I describe Tuck? Well, he’s a famous wide receiver for the Manhattan Marauders, and a total rascal, but he has a good heart. He’d probably scoff at hearing compassion is one of his strengths, but it is. The thing about Tuck is, he has none of the baggage so many romance heroes do. He comes from a loving family, has a career he loves, and no broken relationships have left a scar on his heart. He’s happy and whether he realizes it or not, he can’t resist stepping in to help others to be happy as well. On the flip side, he’s led something of a charmed life and, as you can imagine, having everything makes him a bit spoiled.

CrowneTour copyDo you have any words of inspiration for aspiring authors?

Most important: Keep writing. The more you do something, the better you get. And start building a solid social media platform sooner rather than later. I thought writing the story was the hard part, but was blown away by the amount of time required to promote my work. There are millions of authors out there who have been where you are. Follow a few of them and watch what they do that works. It will save you time and frustration later.

Excerpt:

Her gaze dropped to his legs. “You’re limping.”

“Yeah, I am.” He blasted her with a wicked smile. “I had a little accident the other day.”

Her scowl immediately became defensive. “I didn’t ask you to jump into the middle of things. If you’re hurt, it’s your own fault.”

The vehemence of her response surprised him. He raised a brow and glanced at Walter. The dog’s rear end wagged so vigorously he was amazed the animal managed to remain on his feet.

“I’ll tell you what.” He met her gaze and kept his smile in place. “I promise not to sue, if you promise—”

“Ha! Try it, pal. I’ll countersue you for public molestation.”

He chuckled. She had a point, and wouldn’t that spectacle go over well with the league front office? “You didn’t let me finish.”

Suspicion darkened those eyes he’d stared into in his dirty dream, but she didn’t interrupt again.

“I promise not to sue, if you promise to accept my gift.”

Long, dark blond lashes fluttered when she blinked. “What gift?”

He tucked a hand in his back pocket, retrieved the small envelope, and held it out. “Go ahead. Take it.” When she refused, he dipped his head closer. “Did I mention I have a really good lawyer?”

She hesitated a moment, her lips flattening further, then snatched the envelope from his fingers with ill grace. Her brows puckered as she read the embossed label. “Paws Finishing School?”

“It’s a certificate for a week-long obedience program. I thought Walter could use some lessons in manners.”

Her gaze flicked to her dog, who was attempting to stretch his leash far enough to lift his leg on her neighbor’s rose bush. “He could definitely use some lessons in manners but”, she held out the envelope, “I can’t take this.”

Tuck shoved both hands into the front pockets of his jeans and grinned. “A really great lawyer.”

She sighed. “Look. I appreciate the thought, and to tell the truth, I’ve been planning to enroll him somewhere, but—”

“Perfect. Now you’re all set.”

“But I can’t let you pay for it. Why would you, anyway?”

He waved off her question. “It’s no big deal. I won the certificate at a silent auction.” A big fat whopper if he’d ever told one, but the white lie was for a good cause. “I don’t have a dog, so if you don’t take it, I’ll just give it to someone else.”

“What about that idiot mutt you mentioned?”

He smiled. “Oh, he’s not mine. We just hang out sometimes.”

She cocked her head. A butterscotch curl escaped the knot of hair gathered at the top of her head, sliding over her forehead to wrap around her chin. His fingers tingled with the desire to tuck the glossy lock behind her ear, just for the chance to touch her.

“Why would you bid on a dog obedience program when you don’t have a dog?”

Prickly and beautiful. Major turn-on. “It was for a good cause.”

His own.

BLURB

To Win Her Trust by Mackenzie Crowne

Can she trust this player with her heart?

Ever since experiencing a childhood trauma, reclusive artist CC Calhoun has suffered from panic attacks. But when a fateful kiss from handsome wide receiver, Kevin “Tuck” Tucker, is enough to stop one of those episodes cold, she wonders if guarding her heart has been the right choice. Will going on a test date with Tuck open her to trusting someone for the first time in years? Or will she wind up being just another notch in the football player’s bedpost?

Tuck has a reputation for charming women into bed, but after his kiss with CC, he’s left aching for more. When he proposes a second date, his attraction to the sexy blonde looks like the makings of true love—something he’s never quite believed in—until now. But when Tuck discovers CC’s childhood secrets, will the pro athlete be tough enough to stay by her side—or will he betray her hard-earned trust?

Head shot 2014Author Bio

Wife, mother and really young grandmother, Mackenzie lives with her high school sweet heart husband, a neurotic Pomeranian, and a blind cat. She calls Phoenix home because the southwest feeds her soul. Though her friends claim she’s a princess, she disagrees. After all, one can’t raise two rambunctious boys to wonderful men without getting a little dirt under their nails. A lover of the romance genre, her resolve to share her stories with others was sharpened by a bout with breast cancer. Today she is an award-winning author and eight year survivor, living the dream. Her friends call her Mac. She hopes you will, too. Connect with her at http://mackenziecrowne.com, https://www.facebook.com/MackenzieCrowne and https://twitter.com/MacCrowne.

 

Purchase Links

Amazon

Barnes & Noble

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Buy links via Kensington: http://www.ekensingtonbooks.com/author.aspx/31681

 

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