An Interview with Paisley Kirkpatrick

Please help me welcome Paisley Kirkpatrick to my blog today. Paisley is giving away a copy of her book Night Angel to one lucky commentor so be sure and leave her a comment.

NightAngelCoverArtlg_2If you could live anywhere in the world where would it be, and why?

Scotland would be my choice — anywhere in the Highlands would be an answer to a dream. My Mother’s family migrated from Scotland to the States several generations ago. While I was sitting in a boat on Loch Ness, I knew I’d come home. The feeling of familiarity on my first trip to Scotland has never left me. I choose Scots as my heroes, I get subscriptions to Scottish magazines, belong to a Celtic Hearts online chapter, and my addiction is Gerard Butler.

Do you have other talents?

My hobby is sewing. Over the past ten years, I’ve made and given away 33 quilts. Most of them have been crib size, made from bright colors and child prints of flannels. The others have keepsake photos on them, book covers, and favorite entertainers. Lately I’ve started making small pillows with print pillowcases. With all the hours we spend in front of a computer, they are perfect to fit behind your back or neck. On occasion I make tote bags. I’ve found that taking a break from the computer rests my eyes and gives my muse a chance to rebuild.

What inspired your latest book?

My great, great grandfather Charles Kirkpatrick came across the country in 1849. He kept a journal of the journey and it was so well written that it is kept under glass in the Bancroft Library at the University of California, Berkeley. My Mother was able to get a copy of the journal and I found it so interesting that I used a lot of information he shared in this story.

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

September, 2013, is release date for the third book in the Paradise Pines Series: Forever After. Used as a wager in a poker game, Marinda Benjamin’s life is drawn into a devious scheme of adventure and revenge. She acquiesces to her blackmailing boss’s demands and takes a maid’s job at the Braddock farm knowing full well she is expected to spy on Dr. Braddock. Her father’s life and care of her ailing mother depend on whether she cooperates with the hateful banker and retrieves files on a fraudulent insurance scheme. When Ethan Braddock discovers her cleaning his medical office and realizes from the first that she is the pawn of his arch enemy, he gives her a chance to prove herself. Marinda survives being shanghaied and after a long journey ends up in San Francisco with Ethan. She is provided an opportunity to reclaim her self-esteem by providing the proof to have him jailed.

How does your family feel about your writing career?

I am so lucky to have the full support of my husband and daughter. Sometimes I think hubby is more excited about promoting my books than I am. He passes out postcards with my story information everywhere he goes. My daughter and I have lunch every Thursday and we brainstorm my story. I appreciate getting her input and am amazed at how many writer’s blocks she has crushed.

Do you have critique partners?

I am so blessed with my critique partners. They’ve been patient beyond words in helping me to learn the ins and outs of the writing world. I know they’ve been integral in me getting published. Recently I’ve found my first male CP and the lessons he’s given me in writing the male point of view are invaluable to me. He’s also pushed me into reading different genres and expanded my interests for new kinds of stories and characters.

Are you a plotter or a pantser?

I am definitely a pantser. In fact, I love my characters to tell me their story and help me write it. Unfortunately, I find if I am doing something they are not happy with, they stop talking. There is nothing worse than a quiet muse. I’ve found that plying them with music from Phantom of the Opera brings them around fairly quickly. Of course, realizing what I am doing wrong and rectifying the problem helps a lot, too.

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

Tom Selleck came to mind when I created Chase, the wagon train scout. He just seemed to fill the role of protector, hunter, scout, and blood brother to a Sioux. He is used to giving orders and having them obeyed. Then, this sassy young woman walks into his life full of bluster and opinions of her own. He has to learn to have more patience than he is used to having and keep her and the other emigrants alive on the trail west.

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

Darrah is running from the betrayal of three men and is holding onto her heart as tight as she can when she makes a marriage bargain to wed the scout in name only to enable her to join the wagon train. The scout can’t understand why she would put herself into such a position, but she knows to return home as a failure wasn’t in her best interest. She has few trail skills, but learns how to keep up with the others on the westward trail.

What genres are you drawn to as a reader?

I have always enjoyed reading historicals and also prefer to write them. We live in the Sierra Mountains and history from the 1849 gold rush surrounds us. My grandparents also lived in gold country and we spent a lot of time exploring all of the old gold mining sites. Historicals set in Scotland are also favorites of mine.

Do you write under a pen name? Why or why not? How did you choose it?

I do write under a pen name because I liked the one I chose and it moved me up in the alphabet quite a few notches. Kirkpatrick is my Mother’s family name and Paisley is an old town in Scotland that not only was the birth place of one of my great, great grandfathers but was one of our favorite places to explore in Scotland.

Marriage-Bargain-mocks2_2EXCERPT FOR MARRIAGE BARGAIN:

He tossed his hat near the heat and raked his fingers through dark, tangled curls before he got up and rummaged through his saddlebag. He returned and handed her a pistol. “Here, if it’ll make you feel more secure take this for protection. You could scream, but I doubt anyone would come to your defense out here.”
She held the barrel of the gun between her thumb and index finger. After a fleeting examination, she handed it back. “Umm, no thank you. I don’t feel that threatened.”
He put the weapon in his saddlebag. This time he returned holding a knife. “How about my Bowie knife?” he said, grinning.
She stared at the twelve-inch blade and bit the inside of her lip to keep from smiling. He was being absolutely charming. “You’re a tease. The thing is so large you could gut a buffalo with it.”
He let out a deep, exaggerated sigh. “Well then, this is all I have left.” He hunkered down and pulled a four-inch knife from his boot. “You might keep it for your peace of mind.”
Darrah accepted the weapon. “This one’s more my size, but I don’t have experience using a knife of any length. Would you mind showing me the proper place to stick a blade this short? If I must protect myself, I’d prefer to inflect the most damage possible with the first thrust.”
His right brow quirked. “For my own preservation, I think not.” He slid the Bowie knife inside his saddlebag and stripped off his wet shirt, tossing it next to the campfire.
Frozen in fascination, she couldn’t tear her gaze from the mass of dark curls covering his tanned, brawny chest. He is handsome in a rugged sort of way she had to admit.
He sat next to her and tugged off his boots. “The offer’s still open. You can shed the wet skirt and crawl under my fur with me.” His mouth eased into a dimpled grin. “I can guarantee you’ll not be cold anymore.”

Paisley_2BIO:

Discovering that riding off into the sunset was a lot easier on a computer screen than in real life, not to mention those saddle burns, Paisley Kirkpatrick began her career as an author. Hiding in the Sierra Mountain Range of California with her husband of 44 years, Paisley Kirkpatrick spends her time roping in the cowpoke of her dreams, or can be found wandering the streets of California’s gold rush towns to find inspiration for her books. She might not have found gold in them there hills, but she did find a love for the old west and the prickling of the stories that make up her Paradise Pines series.
Drawing on family history and a healthy imagination, Paisley kicks off her wild ride on a dusty trail with Night Angel. Don’t worry your little heads, though. It’s the first of many adventures in a time when men were men, and women knew how to put them in their place. If you love your cowboys rugged with a sensitive side, and your heroines with enough fire to light up the western sky, you’ve got a home waiting in Paradise Pines. Just be sure to bring a six-shooter because the Lady Paisley aims for the heart, and when she fires, she never misses.

Website link http://www.paisleykirkpatrick.com/
Buy links:
Not available at this time for Marriage Bargain
Night Angel:
Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Paradise-Pines-Book-One-ebook/dp/B00909PON0/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1362274363&sr=1-1&keywords=paisley+kirkpatrick
Barnes and Noble: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/paradise-pines-book-one-paisley-kirkpatrick/1112576086?ean=2940014889667

An Interview with Debra Holland

Please help me welcome Debra Holland to my blog today. Debra is giving one lucky commentor a Smashwords coupon for her book Sower of Dreams.

sowerofdreams_750_2If you could live anywhere in the world where would it be, and why?

I’d live in Great Britain in a big old manor house. I feel an affinity for the country, as if I’ve lived many lifetimes there. Since I’d also want a sunny climate, I’d have a house in Hawaii as well. I love the ocean and being able to swim every day.

I live in Southern California and could swim in the ocean every day, but much of the year it’s too cold. And our beaches aren’t as pretty as Hawaii.

Have you had other careers before becoming a writer?

I have other careers WHILE I’m a writer.  I’m a psychotherapist and a corporate crisis/grief counselor. I also teach martial arts. However, due to the success of my books, I’ve cut back on my psychotherapy practice and the crisis counseling so I have more time to write.

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

I write in several different genres because I like reading romance, fantasy, and science fiction. So I write sweet Western historical romance, fantasy romance, and science fiction romance.

I also write nonfiction. I have a book on grief—The Essential Guide to Grief and Grieving—and am working on a book on boundary setting with difficult people.

How many books have you written? Do you have a favorite?

I have six fiction books, one novella, and one collection of short Christmas stories. I also have one nonfiction book.

Tell us about your current series/WIP.

I’m finishing up Harvest of Dreams, which is the third book in The Gods’ Dream Trilogy. It has a lot of characters, including the heroes and heroines from the first books, and Gods and Goddesses. It’s proving to be a long and complicated (and thus frustrating) book to write. Sometimes I want to throw it out the window (which would probably destroy my laptop.) But I have fans who are eagerly waiting for the book, so I can’t give up on them. The thought of them keeps me going.

What inspired your latest book?

The Gods’ Dream Trilogy started out as a short story that I wrote to submit to Andre Norton’s Witch World anthologies. But she wasn’t doing them any more. So I changed the details of the story to make it my own world. Then I made the story into a novella, expanded it to a short book, then into a longer book, then to a trilogy. It’s the story that never stopped growing! (Still hasn’t. Harvest of Dreams is getting longer and longer…) The first book is Sower of Dreams, and Andre read it and gave me a critique. Then she endorsed the book. It was probably one of the last endorsements she gave before she died.

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

I’m writing some Montana Sky novellas with Caroline Fyffe. We’re doing a mail order bride series, and my brides go to my Western town of Sweetwater Springs, and her brides go to the towns from her books. We hope to have them out by the end of April.

Where do you get the ideas for your stories?

I will read, hear, or see something that will spark an idea. Then I keep playing with it until I have characters and a story. For example, while writing Montana Sky Christmas, my collection of Christmas stories, I was on a trail run through the hills with some friends. We jogged by an elderly man, and one woman said, “That man is known for always wearing red socks.”

We ran on, and I kept thinking, red socks, red socks…perfect for a Christmas story. By the halfway point, I figured out my hero was a cowboy who always wore red socks and why. On the way back, I figured out the heroine and the plot. Sure made that four-mile run much easier when I had my mind on the story! That idea became, Red Stockings for Christmas.

Something wonderful and unexpected about self-publishing is how it has opened up my creativity. I had a long stretch where my agent couldn’t sell my novels (they weren’t sexy enough.) Discouraged, I switched to writing nonfiction. I’d get ideas for stories and think, “It takes too long to write a book that doesn’t sell.” So I’d squash the idea. Now I have so many ideas, I’ll be writing for years.

What is your typical day like?

I don’t have a typical day, although I have typical weeks. Monday, Wednesday, Friday I take a women’s fitness bootcamp in the mornings. Tuesday and Thursday, I teach karate in the mornings. I write with a friend at her house on Monday and Wednesday afternoons for two and a half hours. I see counseling clients in my office on Tuesdays until late at night. I take a nap every day because I have hypothyroidism and my brain shuts off until I rest. I’ll usually work on the books in the evening.

Of course the schedule explodes when a crisis job occurs. I drop everything to drive to the company that has had a death, accident, robbery, or anything that upsets the employees.

How does your family feel about your writing career?

I’m not married and don’t have children. The rest of my family is thrilled. My mom is my best sales person. She carries around postcards of my books and tells everyone about them.

Of course, my family is benefiting from my extra income. I have three lovely nieces, and I love taking them shopping or out for a special event like going to the theatre. I’ll be able to help with my oldest niece’s college tuition when she goes to school next year. We’ll know in a few weeks if she gets into USC, my alma mater. I can also help other family members when there is a need. What a blessing!

How much time do you spend promoting your books? What works best for you?

I do very little promotion. Sometime I’ll write a blog or guest blog. But I’ve found if I’m doing promotion, I’m not writing. I’ve also found that the very best promotion I can do is publish another book.

In the last four months, I’ve become more active on Facebook, but mostly because it’s sort of fun. 

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

Don’t give up!!! Keep learning your craft. Keep writing. Enter contests for feedback, so you can see what you still need to work on.

Rejection is very discouraging. Believe me, I have a stack of rejection letters. However, it’s a whole new world of publishing, and writers have some amazing opportunities.

My one mistake was to let discouragement stop me from writing fiction for about four years. I would have had more books to self-publish if I’d kept writing stories as well as work on the nonfiction.

I NEVER dreamed I’d have the success I do today, that I’d make a USA Today list, have a book designated by Amazon as a Top 50 Greatest Love Story, that I’d make three times as much as a writer than I do as a psychotherapist. Wow!

EXCERPT

Dream threads wrapped around Daria, tugging her away from Seagem to an unfamiliar place.

She stood on a hilly desert, gritty beige sand under her bare feet. Overhead, a yellow sun blazed in an arching azure sky. The starkness of the color dried the air from her lungs, making her lightheaded.

Daria fought the dizziness. Where is this place? What am I doing here?

She’d curbed herself of dream walking without the presence of Yadarius, ever since Indaran’s death. Somehow, her blocks must have slipped.

Trepidation, like cold fingers, clutched her stomach, chilling her in spite of the blistering heat.

She shaded her eyes with one hand, staring at the vast blueness. She wasn’t in Seagem anymore; she doubted a sky of such a hue existed anywhere on her world. Was this Yadarius’ doing? Had He sent her somewhere? For what purpose?

Turning in a small circle, she scanned her surroundings, searching for signs of the SeaGod’s presence.

Nothing. Not even a hint of brine in the parched air.

She took deep breaths, striving for calm. To break her paralysis, she forced herself to take a step. The hot sand slithered under her feet. At least being in a dream protected the soles of her feet from burning.

The act of moving freed her from the bonds of her childhood fears. I’m a woman grown. A warrior. This is an entirely different dream walk than my last meeting with Indaran. She tried to believe her words.

Trudging to the top of the hill, Daria looked around. Sand dunes ringed this barren, rocky outcropping, scarce of vegetation. A sense of purpose unfurled tendrils of knowingness. There must be a reason for her being here, and she needed to find out what.
Her ears caught a rhythmic sound, and then the scrape of a shod hoof on a stone.
More curious than apprehensive, she waited.

A rider on an ebony stallion, leading a pack mare, appeared between two ridges, The man wore a loose, light-colored garment over trews, and a head-covering that looked like a cap with a long cloth shielding the back of his neck. She noted the bow hooked close to his hand on the saddle and the fletches of what must be a quiver of arrows on his back. No sword, though.

He turned his head. A strong face, unlike any she’d ever seen. Hawk-like features. Dark skin. Penetrating brown eyes.

His gaze shot to hers, like an arrow through her heart.

Daria felt the impact and stumbled back, her hand flying to cover her chest. Beneath her palm, her heartbeat stuttered, then quickened, like a horse kicked into a canter. Warmth spread under her fingers, racing throughout her body. Her knees weakened.

The man reined in his stallion, watching her, his eyes narrowed. Slowly, he extended his hand to her, palm up, a clear invitation to come to him.

She reached out her hand.

A chain of connection forged across the distance between them.

Then she saw darkness stain the horizon behind him. A clear warning of danger swept through her othersense. She lowered her hand and backed away.

Then the dream threads unraveled. Daria slept on, dreamless.

Sower Amazon buylink: http://amzn.com/B005FA30V6

BIO

Dr._Debra_Holland_2USA Today Bestselling author Debra Holland is a three-time Romance Writers of America Golden Heart finalist and one time winner. She’s the author of The Montana Sky Series, sweet historical Western romance, which she self-published as ebooks. In her first year, she had 97,000 sales, made the USA Today list with Wild Montana Sky, and sold Wild Montana Sky and Starry Montana Sky to Amazon Montlake. In February of 2013, Amazon selected Starry Montana Sky as one of the Top 50 Greatest Love Stories.

Debra is also the author of The Gods’ Dream Trilogy (fantasy romance.) She has a nonfiction book, The Essential Guide to Grief and Grieving from Alpha Books (a subsidiary of Penguin).

She has a free ebooklet available on her website, http://drdebraholland.com: 58 Tips for Getting What You Want From a Difficult Conversation.

Painted Montana Sky is her latest novella.

Interview with Jill James

Please help me welcome Jill James to my blog today. Jill has a new book, Love in the Time of Zombies, coming out soon and you get to see the cover here first. Also, Jill will be giving away a $10 Amazon gift card to one lucky commentor, so be sure to leave a comment to be entered to win.

LoveintheTimeofZombies_500x750_2Tell us about yourself. I’ve been writing as long as I can remember. In the fifth grade we were given titles and had to write short stories. I still remember The Runaway Chevrolet and The Peanut Butter Airplane. LOL I hope my titles are a little better these days. I write under the pseudonym, Jill James because my husband is a cop and we like to protect our safety. I live in beautiful Northern California with my husband, two grown children with significant others, and one Brainy Grandson.

Have you had other careers before becoming a writer? Yes, I was a junior accountant with a tax firm and Accounts Receivable with a trucking company until I was rescued by my future husband to be a stay-at-home mom, wife, and writer.

What genre(s) do you write in and why? I have learned to never say never in regards to my writing. I used to say I would never write contemporary romance. Oops! I have a novel and a series in that subgenre. I used to say I would never write in first person. Oops again! I’m writing an urban fantasy in first person right now. I write contemporary and paranormal romance. It will probably always be romance, my favorite. I’m a sap for a happily ever after.

How many books have you written? Do you have a favorite? I have five published books. 1 almost at the publishing stage. And one under the bed never to be seen completed manuscript. My favorite is Dangerous Shift. That is truly the book of my heart. It wrote itself. I wrote 50,000 of its 76,000 words in two weeks.

Tell us about your current series/WIP. My current WIP is a soon to be published urban fantasy; Love in the Time of Zombies. Emily Gray is a rich, neglected wife in San Francisco until the day the Z virus took away all she knew and loved. She discovers her purpose, her power, her strength in the days that follow. She also learns of what love really is with Seth Ripley, a truck-driving poet. Love in the Time of Zombies should be out by the end of March.

What inspired your latest book? I’ve been on a zombie reading/watching kick for about 18 months. I seen good and I’ve seen bad. I believe if you can have zombies after your flesh, baddies after your limited resources, and living with just your wits and skills, and you can find love, how hard can it be in the normal world. Your own someone special is out there, go find them.

Where do you get the ideas for your stories? Most of my stories start as dreams. My dreams are mostly like films that run all night long. When I wake up I have a whole story ready to be on paper or computer screen, as it may be.

How has your experience with self-publishing been? As a whole, it has been great. I love getting the book covers I want, writing the story the way I want it told, and knowing that I have control of my future.

author_avator_2What advice do you have for other authors wanting to self-publish? It will be a roller-coaster ride. Some days you will dance with happiness over 1 sale and some days you will bang head to desk because of some mix-up that made your book unavailable during a massive promotion.

What was the hardest thing you’ve found in the process of self-publishing? What was the easiest part of self-publishing? The hardest part has been making my own deadlines. It is too easy to say “Oh, I’ll just add another week, even though I told everyone it would be out this week.” The easiest part has been learning formatting (I do my own. Print and eBook). It started out hard but I did computer programming in college and although none of those programs are used any longer, the skills are still there.

What advice can you offer to anyone deciding to self-publish? Learn. Learn. Learn. Listen to anyone who is already doing it. Try doing it yourself. Learn what you can and can not do. Learn what you want and don’t want to do.

How likely are people you meet to end up in your next book? Very likely. I will use friends’ last names or first if I really like the name, but not their personalities. I will use conversations I overhear at Panera Bread or Starbuck’s where I write. If you tell me a funny story, be warned: it could end up in a book.

What is most difficult for you to write? Characters, conflict or emotions? Why? Hands down, conflict. I live in a family with an abundance of alpha males. I hate conflict. So it is really hard for me to add that element to my stories. I have to really work to have conflict and to resolve it realistically. Because my answer is to cry and walk away. 🙂

Are you a plotter or a pantser? A total anal-retentive, plotlines, plotting charts, white boards, index cards, plotter. The more, the better.

How far do you plan ahead? I usually plot out the planned books for the coming years. It can change from time to time if some opportunity comes up. But toward the end of one year I will plan the next.

Website: http://www.jilljameswrites.com
Blog: http://jilljames.wordpress.com/blog
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/jill_james
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/Jill.James.author

An Interview with Terry Blain

Please help me welcome Terry Blain to my blog today. Terry is generously giving a $10 Amazon ebook certificate to one lucky commentor, so be sure and leave a comment to be entered into the drawing.

full-sarahs-cowboy_2What is your favorite part of writing?

The best part of writing? When you feel the story coming together, you really know your characters, and the story seems easy to write. I like writing the first draft, but I do a lot of character studies and storyboarding/plotting before I start the ms.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

Actually getting my butt in the chair and my fingers on the key board. I really like the writing process once I get there, but getting there? Just getting started each day can be a pain. I remember when I first started writing, one of the published authors said she knew she was avoiding getting started when she decided to pluck her eyebrows instead. So guess it not such an odd thing to have getting started the hardest part. Weird, huh?

What does your space look like?

I have an office and when I sold my first book, I bought a desk and several book cases. I don’t have a view from my office (so I don’t spend time looking and not writing). I’m surrounded by books, a big shelf of romance, several book cases full of research books for stories I’ve written and for stories I’d like to write. Collages for the historicals, and a bulletin board with anything I find interesting. Of course the computer and printer. Sorta an organized clutter.

What are you currently working on?

I’m currently working on another contemporary western.

Do you have any rejection stories to share?

My first rejection was for a historical romance (later published as Kentucky Green). The editor said “Your writing took me to another time and another place, I found you hero and heroine realistic and sympathic,” (and by this time I’m hearing the ‘but’ coming) so the editor continued “I took it to the senior editor (another ‘but’ coming?) and the senior editor liked it”, BUT (knew it was coming) “Marketing said ‘no’”’ as Kentucky Green is set in 1794, and marketing didn’t know what to do with it.
So I did write down the good things she said – to remind me that I should keep writing. Then the next historical ms. (Colorado Silver, Colorado Gold set in 1880s) I wrote was in a more ‘market friendly’ era. There is something to learn from every rejection, so now I write in both historical and contemporary setting.

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

My local San Diego chapter of RWA has been a big help and I’ve been a member for over twenty years. Those early years gave me a foundation in craft through workshops as well information on the business of writing. The actual writing, learning the craft came from my critique groups. In my first one, none of us were published, but we wrote and the critiqued each other every week. Then one of our long time published authors gave an eight week workshop attended by ten to twelve of us. Out of that class, we formed a new critique group, at that time all of us unpublished. Now that we’re all published, we morphed into a plotting group – which is where the New Year’s Eve Club novellas came from. If you’re in the right critique group, you’ve got the best learning tool and the best support group you can have.

Tell us a little about yourself and your latest book

I was fortunate enough to grow up in a large Midwestern family with a rich oral tradition hearing stories of ancestor s adventures with Indians, wild life, weather and frontier life in general. This gave me a love history leading to a BA and MA in History and teaching American History and Western Civilization at the community college. So the first books I wrote were historical. However, my latest novella, Sarah’s Cowboy, is a contemporary romance, part of The New Year’s Eve Club.

What inspired your latest book?

Remember when you were young and single and had an idea of that perfect guy you were looking for? Then life happens. The idea for The New Year’s Club series came from a friend of Jill’s and Teresa suggested we do a series of novellas. Our brainstorming/plotting group gets together one or two times a year to work on individual stories, but last year on one of our weekends we plotted all five stories, making sure they mashed and how they would overlap while keeping each story unique. My novella, Sarah’s Cowboy is about a practical school teacher who decides she wants a little adventure. She gets more than she bargained for when she falls for a stuntman on a western film set.

Pub_photo_wKG_2BIO

Terry Irene Blain was lucky enough to grow up in a large Midwestern family with a rich oral tradition. As a child she heard stories of ancestors’ adventures with Indians, wildlife, weather and frontier life in general, so she naturally gravitated to the study of history and completed a BA and MA then taught the subject at the college level. Married to a sailor, now retired, she’s had the chance to live in various parts of the United States as well as travel to foreign places such as Hong Kong, Australia, England and Scotland. She currently writes historical and contemporary romance novels set in the American West.

This novella, Sarah’s Cowboy is part of The New Year’s Eve Club series, https://www.facebook.com/TheNewYearsEveClub

An Interview with Devon Ellington

Please help me welcome Devon Ellington to my blog today. She will be giving away a copy of the book, and also a copy of her short romantic comedy/fantasy “Just Jump in and Fly” (under the Ava Dunne name). So be sure and leave her a comment.

Tell us about your current series.
Old-FashionedDetectiveWork_HiRes_2The book releasing today is OLD-FASHIONED DETECTIVE WORK, the second Jain Lazarus Adventure. HEX-BREAKER, the first book in the series, introduced Jain Lazarus, a hex breaker, who arrives on the set of an indie film to help out some friends having a problem with odd things happening. As the events escalate, Wyatt East, a local detective, steps in. When Jain decapitates a marauding zombie — who used to be a crew member — things get tense between them, but their attraction to each other and affinity for each other just keep growing.

OLD-FASHIONED DETECTIVE WORK is told from Wyatt’s POV. It takes place a few months after HEX BREAKER, and the events of the short stories “The Possession of Nattie Filmore” and “First Feet” happen in between the two books. Jain disappears after a romantic weekend away with Wyatt, and he becomes the prime suspect in her disappearance — especially since he was the prime suspect in his family’s deaths years before. In spite of that, one of Jain’s employers hires Wyatt to bypass the paranormal investigative techniques that haven’t found her, and locate her via good, old-fashioned detective work. Along the way there are shape-shifting wolf and coyote packs, a pair of paranormally talented runaways teens, a cantankerous mermaid, and we find out a lot more about both their pasts.

Billy Root, who was a minor character in HEX BREAKER and turned out to be fan favorite with his own fan base (and now, his own blog), is not in this book, but the third book in the series, CRAVE THE HUNT, is mostly from his POV, so his fans have something to look forward to!

How likely are people you meet to end up in your next book?
I often joke that people who annoy me wind up meeting interesting ends in my books! 😉 Seriously, though, as a writer, everything we experience on any level is inspiration, so anyone who crosses our path fits the bill. However, when I do my job properly as a writer, the character evolves away from the inspiration and becomes a unique individual. By the time the book is done, there’s very little of the original person left, and the character is viable on his/her own.

Do you prefer to read in the same genres you write in or do you avoid reading that genre? Why?
I write in several genres. When I’m working on, say, urban fantasy, I read in mystery or non-fiction. If I’m writing a mystery, I’ll read fantasy. I prefer not to read in the genre I’m writing in at the moment. I like to be able to step away from the work and take a breath by reading. Since I’m a paid reviewer, that doesn’t always work — I have to read what I’m assigned. But I like to read as kind of a palette cleanser, so the reading and the writing genres are separate.

I like to read outstanding authors across genre lines and break down how they use structure, revealing character detail, etc., because one never stops learning, and one always strives to make the next book better than the previous one.

Do you have any words of inspiration for aspiring authors?
Sit your butt in that chair every day and write. Don’t make excuses. There’s no such thing as “no time to write”. If you have “no time” to write, it means you don’t WANT to write. Writing is a choice. Not writing is a choice. Both have consequences, and you are responsible for either choice.

Do you or have you belonged to a writing organization? Which one? Have the helped you with your writing? How?
I’ve belonged to several organizations over the years, some useful, some not. For me, the most life-changing is PEN — the international work they do to make the world a better place is amazing, and their World Voices Festival has changed my life for the better every time I’ve attended. As writers, it is our responsibility to entertain and to sow the seeds of positive change. In other countries, the power of the word is either revered or feared, and there are huge consequences to using words. We need to remember and honor that. Genre fiction is a wonderful place to explore social issues and imbalances, when it’s done well.

I was recently named to the Board of Directors of one of my other favorite organizations, the Cape Cod Writers Center. That’s a truly amazing place, and the way it supports and encourages writers at all stages of their careers is really beautiful. I’m excited to be a part of their growth. Their August conference is the best I’ve ever attended.

A good writing organization will offer a supportive environment that gives tough love when necessary, but doesn’t leave any participant as though they’re not “enough” of anything. A good organization has networking and promotional opportunities, but more than that, the best organizations show you new ways to view the world and communicate it effectively to your readership. They encourage growth in community.

What is your writing routine like?
Every day is different, thank goodness, or I’d be in a different line of work!

Mornings are fairly regulated. Up early, yoga, meditation, feed the cats, make the coffee, write my first 1000 words of the day. After that, I blog, check email, and switch back and forth on the contracted, deadlined projects, and work with my students. Since I make my living writing — it IS my day job — I can’t afford, on any level, not to show up and do the work every day, just like anyone else with a job. I’m lucky that I love my job.

I usually run errands and/or have client meetings in the late morning, early afternoon, then go back and do another writing or editing session in the afternoon. I’m getting better about logging off at a reasonable hour and keeping evenings for families and friends.

Of course, if there’s a tight deadline, you do whatever it takes to get it done. If it means getting up earlier or pulling an all-nighter, that’s what you do. I try to stay on top of everything so those are rare, but sometimes several good opportunities land in your lap at once, and you can’t drop any of the balls. So, I’m tired for a few days. But it’s all worth it in the end.

What’s next for you?
Working on the third book in the Jain Lazarus series, CRAVE THE HUNT. HEX BREAKER, the first book, was entirely from Jain’s POV. OLD-FASHIONED DETECTIVE WORK, the second book in the series that released today, is in Wyatt’s POV. CRAVE THE HUNT alternates between Billy’s POV and Jain’s. The fourth book in the series, LOVE AND FURY, will either be entirely in Jain’s POV, or alternate Jain and Wyatt. I’m also working on an aviation mystery set in the 1940s, and a mystery set in a marine life hospital. I work with the National Marine Life Center in Buzzards Bay, and they’re so inspiring I wanted to set something in that environment. I’ve got several short pieces out under various names, and a couple of novels out in the pipeline — I’ll be sure to let you know what hits and where it lands!

Bio:
Devon_Ellington_icon_2Devon Ellington is a full-time writer, who publishes under a half a dozen names in both fiction and non-fiction, and teaches writing all over the world. Her Jain Lazarus Adventures are handled by Solstice Publishing (http://hexbreaker.devonellingtonwork.com) and her romantic suspense novel, ASSUMPTION OF RIGHT (as Annabel Aidan) is out with Champagne Books. “Sea Diamond”, featuring Fiona Steele, is included in the DEATH SPARKLES anthology, released in Fall 2012. She’s published hundreds of stories, articles, speeches, and scripts throughout her career. Visit her blog on the writing life, Ink in My Coffee (http://devonellington.wordpress.com) and her website, http://www.devonellingtonwork.com.

OLD-FASHIONED DETECTIVE WORK
A Jain Lazarus Adventure
By Devon Ellington

Detective Wyatt East finds himself the primary suspect when hex breaker Jain Lazarus disappears after their romantic weekend in Vermont. In spite of the suspicions, Jain’s boss, Maitland Stiles, hires Wyatt to track her down, forcing him to face aspects of his own painful past and revealing more about hers.
Saddled with two rebellious runaway paranormal teens, he’s embroiled in a shapeshifter pack disagreement, and must learn to work with both a caustic dragon and a cantankerous mermaid to not only find Jain, but help her help an old friend who’s in over his head. Wyatt learns he is not without psychic abilities of his own, although he prefers old-fashioned detective work.

Excerpt:

“Again, Mr. Collins,” said Wyatt. “What can I do for you?”

“When did you last see Jain Lazarus?”

“We spent a four day weekend together about six weeks ago in Vermont.”

“Have you spoken to her since?”

“I left a few messages on her voice mail, but I haven’t heard back.”

“Yes, we know that. We have her phone.”

Wyatt felt a chill run down his spine. “Why would you have her phone?”

“Was she in good health when you parted?”

“We went skiing in the morning. We went back to change. She got a phone call – on the landline, not her cell, and said she had to go. She left before I did.”

“Interesting.”

“Why?”

“No one’s seen or heard from her since that weekend in Vermont.”

“Are you looking for her?”

“Yes. She was due in our office the very next morning to get briefed on a new assignment. The proprietor of the inn tells a different story.”

“What do you mean?”

“He says the two of you left in the morning, but you came back alone.”

“That’s not true.”

“And there’s no record of a call going through to your room.”

“That doesn’t make sense.”

“Did you argue with Jain that weekend?’

“No. We had a great time.”

“Don’t lie to me, Detective. I’m every bit as capable of discerning a liar as you are.”

“Then you know I’m telling the truth.”

“Either that or you’re even more talented than Jain believed. You are the last person we know who saw Jain before her disappearance.”

OLD-FASHIONED DETECTIVE WORK available from Solstice Publishing on March 4, 2012:
http://www.solsticepublshing.com

Excerpts, buy links, and information for the series on the Jain Lazarus Site:
http://hexbreaker.devonellingtonwork.com

Interview with Kristen Beairsto

Please help me welcome Kristen Beairsto to my blog today. Kristen will be giving away a ecopy of her book Going After the Heart to one lucky commentor, so be sure and leave a comment.

LeavesWhat is your favorite part of writing?

My favorite part is creating that first rough draft of the story. It’s amazing to see a story pulled out of my mind and take shape on the page. No matter how horrible the rough draft is (hey that’s what editing is for, right? 😉 ) crafting a story and getting it all down on paper is incredible.

What is your typical day like?

In a word: crazy! LOL! During the week, I spend 9 hours each day at a day job. I’m married and have two kids, so there’s usually a softball practice, Girl Scout meeting, homework, or any other of the million things that happen with kids after I get home. I also try to fit in some gym time. Then somewhere between all of that, I try to fit in as much writing, editing, and marketing as I can. So it’s not glamorous but I love it. 

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

In May, I’ll hit my one year mark of being self-published and it’s been a roller coaster so far. Incredibly fun, but crazy. I’ve learned a tremendous amount about the industry and myself, so even if I don’t sell another book, I’ll still consider this adventure a success.
What advice do you have for other authors wanting to self-publish?
Cultivate patience and don’t give up! It takes time, tenacity, and tolerance to be successful in this business. And success isn’t always measured in monetary values. This industry isn’t about overnight success, so keep writing, editing, and publishing and you’ll eventually get to where you want to be.
What is your favorite dessert/food?
At the moment, my favorite food is hummus. (I’m trying to focus on being healthier and I’m silently telling myself as I write this answer that my favorite food is no longer mint chocolate chip ice cream LOL!)

What is most difficult for you to write? Characters, conflict or emotions? Why?

I find the most difficult thing to write is realistic character reactions. I know how I’d like them to react in certain situations, but what I want and what’s realistic for that character based on their personality could be two different things. This is especially true in really tense, emotional situations. I always obsess over whether or not a character is acting appropriately for their personality.

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

Gavin is my hero in Going After the Heart. He’s a guy who’s biggest strength is that he knows what is important in life and tries to do what he thinks is right. Gavin’s biggest weakness is not handling emotional situations very well.
Tell us about your heroine. Give us one of her strengths and one of her weaknesses.
Lizzy, Gavin’s wife, is my heroine in Going After the Heart. Her biggest strength is being able to accept that she’s made mistakes. And one of her weaknesses is how easily she seems to get wrapped in her work.

Going After the Heart Blurb

Lizzy Bergstrum thought she finally reached a point in her life when she could honestly say she had it all. A thriving writing career. A wonderful daughter. And a marriage to the love of her life. But looks can apparently be deceiving because her husband just walked out on her and their eight year old daughter hates her.

Gavin Bergstrum can’t handle the direction his life has taken. Not only did he get laid off from his job, but his wife seems to barely remember he exists. Convinced he’s tried his best to change things, he begins to wrestle with the possibility of divorce. But he can’t think straight in the same house as Lizzy. Hating to leave his daughter, but needing time to think and come to terms with what he feels he needs to do, Gavin decides to return to his small home town in Oregon and stay at his family ranch with his father and brothers.

In shock, Lizzy gives Gavin his space. But as time passes and he doesn’t say a word about their marriage, Lizzy decides it’s past time she takes matters into her own hands. Without a word, she follows Gavin to Oregon.

Now facing a daughter who blames her for everything, an irritated husband, and a small town that feeds on the drama, Lizzy finds herself trying to figure out how to convince Gavin to give her another chance, teach her daughter it takes two to make a successful marriage, and overcome her own insecurities – all without compromising who she is.

Going After the Heart Excerpt

“Here’s the keys to the cabin. The round one is to the front and back doors and the square one is for the shed.” Ray’s voice sounded clear and even behind him.
Turning, Gavin watched his father hand Lizzy a small set of keys.
“I had Clare clean it up for you. Like I said on the phone, it’s not the newest place in the world, but it’s still in pretty good shape considering its age.”
Lizzy gave his father a small smile as she took the keys from him. “I’m sure it’s great.”
Her gaze moved to him and resentment swelled watching her smile fade. Although, what did he expect, she hadn’t smiled at him for months prior to him leaving. Why would she start now?
But the indiscernible look settling on Lizzy’s features startled him. After ten years of marriage and five years together before getting married, Gavin would have bet big money he knew every single one of his wife’s expressions. But this one, he realized dumbfounded, he didn’t recognize.
Her gaze dropped down to Sky. “Come on, Sky, we’ve got to go up to the cabin to settle in.”
Beside him, Gavin felt Sky’s shoulders tense.
“No!” She shouted the word venomously. “I don’t want to go with you,” she spat before turning pleading blue eyes up at him. “Dad, can’t I stay here with you and Papa? I don’t want to go with her.”
Apparently he missed the memo about today being Surprise Day, Gavin realized, as he could only stare at his daughter for a moment, never having seen this side of her before.
“I tell you what, little missy, no little girl is welcome in my house that sasses her mama the way you just did. No matter what injustice you think she’s handed you, a child never speaks to their parent that way.” Ray delivered his little speech with an even look and matching tone.
Sky’s cheeks turned bright red. Gavin frowned down at her. “Your grandfather’s right, you know better than to talk to your mom that way.”
Looking up to his wife, he arched a brow. Apparently the statute of limitations for surprises for the day hadn’t been reached yet, he thought silently in disbelief when Lizzy didn’t scold, or even comment on, Sky’s behavior.
Rather than say anything, Lizzy looked away and her back stiffened so much he thought her spine would snap.
What the hell is going on? His bewilderment bothered him.
Seeing Lizzy wouldn’t say anything, Gavin looked back down at Sky. “Honey, since I didn’t know you were coming, I don’t have anywhere set up for you to sleep. I’m sleeping on a cot in one of the extra rooms. I’ll try to look at setting something up tomorrow so you can stay a few nights with me. How does that sound?”
A stubborn look Gavin recognized all too easily surfaced on Sky’s face, but she remained silent, temporarily mollified and nodded. Turning away from him, Sky made her way back to the car and climbed in without so much as a single glance in her mother’s direction.
Gavin returned his gaze back to Lizzy, but she completely ignored him as she turned to climb back in the car.
That, at least, he’d grown used to.

Author3_2Kristen Beairsto

In between her to-be-read pile and trying to bring the characters in her head alive, Kristen spends as much time as she can with family and friends. Much to her husband’s dismay, she enjoys collecting purses, shoes, and jewelry. During those rare times she’s not working at her day job, rushing her daughters somewhere, watching movies with her husband, and trying to meet a deadline, she can usually be found energetically cheering for one of her favorite New York sports teams.

As with just about every other writer on the planet, Kristen grew up an avid reader. She started with young adult before she technically hit the age range and moved on to sci-fi classics by Isaac Asimov and Ray Bradbury. At fifteen, her best friend gave her a book she just had to read! The book was Honest Illusions by Nora Roberts. Always a sucker for a happy ending, she was a goner and fell in love with the romance genre. Having started writing novel length stories at the age of eleven, Kristen’s stories all took a romantic turn from that point on.

You can connect with Kristen through her website www.KristenBeairsto.com, Facebook www.facebook.com/AuthorKristenBeairsto, or Twitter www.twitter.com/AuthorKBeairsto.

Interview with Marian Lanouette

Please help me welcome Marian Lanouette to my blog today. She will be giving a copy of one of her books to a lucky commentor, so be sure and leave a comment for her.

Books:
If I Fail, A Jake Carrington Mystery September 7, 2012
Burn in Hell, A Jake Carrington Mystery January 18, 2013
As the World Ends, Novella January 2013

BurninHell_500_2Thank you so much for having me here today, Cindy. I love your blog and your guests. It’s an honor to be included among them.

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

I write mysteries with romantic elements. It’s the puzzle and the steps required to solve a mystery that intrigues me. I love reading a good mystery but I love my romance too. So, both together is a home run.

Tell us about your current series.

My current series titled A Jake Carrington Mystery is about Lieutenant Jake Carrington and his Partner Louie Romanelli. It’s set in a small city in Connecticut. Jake runs the homicide department and now as the added burden of missing persons department. Each book looks at a couple of murders as we grow to know the detectives in their personal lives.

What inspired your latest book?

Burn in Hell the second book in the Jake Carrington Mystery revolves around Kyra Russell. She and Jake meet at a party and start dating. But soon after he starts to suspect things aren’t right with Kyra. She cremates people for a living (something I used to do.) As I did it years ago, my imagination always took off in different directions with the possibilities of the job. When I created Jake, I thought I’d have to use cremation somehow.

What is your favorite part of writing?

I love the first draft. As the story flows from my mind, to fingers and then the keyboard, it’s so exciting.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

Trying to sell and wade through the rejections. But I understand the need and how it makes the story stronger.

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

As_the_World_Ends_eBook_2My next project after Burn in Hell is released is As the World Ends. It also releases in January 2013. I’m working on the third book in the series, Mated for Life. I’m actually two-thirds done with the first draft.

What is your typical day like?

I get up, exercise, eat, shower and I’m at my desk for the next six hours writing, researching, marketing, blogging and/or answering emails. Then lunch and three more hours of writing or plotting.

How much time do you spend promoting your books?

It’s seems since my first book If I Fail, A Jake Carrington Mystery came out in September 2012, all my time is devoted to marketing. But in reality, I’d say I spend three to four hours a day marketing my writing.

What works best for you?

Believe it or not “Word of mouth” advertising. If one person loves your book they are going to speak it up to another and so it goes down the line. The important thing to do is write so readers love it and want to talk about. I want to stop here and offer a special thank you to all the readers that loved If I fail. You’re a great bunch. Thanks also for the wonderful reviews.

Excerpt Burn in Hell:

With her head down, she sat at her machine, waiting on the supervisor to come back—to unlock the machine so she could play again. More than anything, she needed to win. A hand landed on her shoulder, startling her. Jerking away, Kyra turned to see who belonged to the hand. Crap, not the supervisor. Joe Dillon, not exactly the person I want to see right now.

“Hi, Kyra.”

“Hey, Joe.”

“How’s it going?” Her host sat down next to her.

“Not good,” she whined.

“I’m sorry to hear it. You know you have a payment due soon?”

Double crapola. “Yes, I know.”

“Why don’t you leave the machine for a while? Come have something to eat with me?”

What could he be up to, she wonder?

“Why?”

“Why? Kyra, let’s discuss your loan payment over dinner, explore your options.”

What options? There weren’t any. All week she racked her brain trying to find a solution to the mess. Though a quiet guy, Joe scared her. Deep inside, she understood he could destroy her. Not a person she’d want to cross.

“Kyra? Please, no one’s going to touch your machine. Maybe a break will change your luck?”

“What the hell. I could eat,” Kyra hissed. Something had to change.

“How about a steak?”

“Fine.”

They got up at the same time, bumping into each other. Joe sat back down, let Kyra get up first. He followed her as she headed to the Trenton Steak House. Joe grabbed her arm and pointed to the private elevator that went directly to the entrance to the Whale Room. She looked at him. He smiled.

“What’s up, Joe?”

“I think you need a real break Kyra, so we’ll head up.”

Curiosity got the better of her, but she figured she’d find out what he was up to in good time. Then the fear hit her. Maybe she shouldn’t leave the floor with him. She owed the casino seventy-five thousand dollars. Behind on her payments, she spent three grand tonight trying to win her next payment. Stupid—how could I be so stupid? I should’ve made a partial payment with the three grand instead of gambling tonight. They wouldn’t beat up her up, would they? Tasting the bile as it violently pushed up from her stomach, scorching a path to her throat. Kyra couldn’t control the tears that flooded into her eyes when she started to choke.

“Are you all right, Kyra?”

“I don’t want to leave the public floor, Joe.” Kyra’s hands shook along with her entire body. Unable to control her voice as it cracked, her mind searching for an escape.

“I have a deal for you, but I can’t discuss it in an open area. We’ll discuss it upstairs, over dinner.” He smiled.

Oh yeah, she thought, the farmer leading the cow to the slaughter. “What kind of deal?”

“We’ll discuss it upstairs,” he repeated firmly.

“You’re not going to break my legs or anything like that. Are you?” she half-heartily joked.

“No such thing, Kyra. Relax.” Now’s the time too really worry, she thought. Just like the “trust me” phrase, it gave her the willies.

* * * *

Joe Dillon studied Kyra as they rode up in the elevator. To look at her, you’d never guess she’d lost control of her life. He liked her curves, her full lips, and the wild, curly red hair. Shorter than he, she stood about five feet four inches—he didn’t like looking up at a woman. Too many women today were taller than him. He looked into her green, green eyes, his mind taking off in all directions. Not now, Joe. Kyra’s not worth the trouble. He knew she had a son—her divorce a by-product of gambling. The boss told him this morning she was losing custody of her son. What woman gambles to the point of losing her child? Joe thought about the deal he’d be offering her, dragging her down even further. He pushed the guilt from his mind. Not my fucking problem. Kyra did this to herself. If I ever caught Camile gambling, I’d break her legs. Joe saw what gambling did to families. Too much heartache for too little reward, he mused.

Joe thought of the deal he’d lay on the table for her—two choices—wondering which one she’d choose. Neither was pleasant. I’m only the messenger. That’s how he justified his work. Blinded by greed, these people put themselves in this position with their gambling addictions.

book_(119)_book_profile_pic (1)_2Bio:
One of ten children, Marian took to writing to explore new and adventurous places. While her friends traveled on planes for vacation, Marian traveled in books. With an overactive imagination, it didn’t take long for her to start creating her own characters and stories. If I Fail, A Jake Carrington Mystery that released in 2012, is the first book in the series.

As an avid reader, she discovered mysteries by reading the Daily News as a youngster. Intrigued by the real life crimes, and how the police worked and eventually solved them, ignited her imagination beyond the ordinary.

An English professor marked her final paper with an A, but wrote a note that said, “Well done, though you’re not Virginia Woolf yet, so add a little action to the story.” That one line had her punching up the action in stories to come.

Marian has many plans (books) for Jake Carrington and his crew. She invites you to discover these wonderful characters and share your impressions at:

marian.author@gmail.com or www.marianl.com
Buy links:
If I Fail: Amazon:
MuseItUp Publishing:
Burn in Hell:
As the World Ends

An Interview with M. S. Spencer

Thanks for having me today, Cynthia. I’d like to offer a pdf copy of Mai Tais and Mayhem to one lucky reader.

MaiTaisandMayhem_by_M._S._Spencer_2What is your typical day like?

I lie abed for hours, noshing chocolates and ringing for my maid. Eventually I rise, take a long bubble bath, then dress for a dinner of lobster and champagne at the local five-star restaurant with my adoring fans.

Thank God they don’t care if I’m in my pjs and bunny slippers. And forgot to brush my teeth.

Honestly? Between household chores and staring out the window and checking email I fit in a little writing—usually starting about four p.m.

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

I have a wonderful view. My study looks out on my tiny backyard, but beyond the fence is a park, a belt of trees, and a river. I can while away the hours watching an endless parade of deer, foxes, dogs and their walkers, and birds. Sometimes I even look down to discover my laptop. It sits on an enormous desk I got for free when the local community theatre had finished with it. Missing the middle drawer, it does have two pull-out leaves on either side of me, so when I write I am literally surrounded by desk (and papers, and books, and…). It’s my nest.

What is your favorite dessert/food?

I don’t have a sweet tooth although every now and then I must have a Hostess Chocolate Cupcake—and since they’ve found a buyer for the company I won’t have to go without much longer! If I had to choose one favorite it would be a hamburger of Angus beef, cooked rare, slathered in blue cheese, and smothered with tomatoes, onions and lots of butter lettuce. Take that, food police!

What is your least favorite part of writing?

It’s when I have to stop writing because I really should do a little more research before I go on, and maybe decide on the names of the hero and heroine, and possibly where the plot should lead. I’m so anxious to get words on paper that I have to force myself to hold back and make some decisions before I start, although sometimes just letting the fingers dance can lead to unexpected twists and turns. After all, no one knew until the end how Casablanca would turn out, and it worked out pretty well.

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

I have a romantic suspense/action/adventure novel coming out in May from Secret Cravings. Lapses of Memory is a story within a story of a couple who meet every few years on a plane. Journalists, they become embroiled in all kinds of international crises, from the Iranian revolution to the Lebanese Civil war. Along the way they get to fly in the latest aircraft as it goes on-line. The story is intertwined with the contemporary romantic troubles of the heroine’s daughter, who must choose between a reserved American and a mercurial Frenchman.

What are you currently working on?

I’m finishing the draft of The Mark of Love and Death, a romance set in the 330-foot-tall Masonic Memorial in Alexandria. Here’s a summary:

Her first day as docent in the George Washington Masonic Memorial, Claire Wilding finds a distinctly non-Masonic item: a dead body. As she deals with a smitten police detective, a handsome Washington expert, black ops agents, and two ruthless mothers, she learns more than she ever expected to about jewels and pennies, irregular Masonic lodges, and our first President’s family secrets.

Do you have any rejection stories to share?

You want me to suffer all over again? Hmm? Actually, my rejection was a bit unusual in that the acquisitions editor returned my manuscript, not with a terse note, but with copious editing and advice—bless her! The second time I submitted it went to a different editor and was rejected (again), but I learned so much from that wonderful editor. My next attempt met with success.

What sort of promo do you do? Do you have help?

I use all the usual suspects to get the word out about my books: Facebook, Twitter, Goodreads, Yahoo groups, Pinterest, plus blog hops and guest posts as well as having guest authors on my blog. I’m participating in a pilot program set up by my publisher, Secret Cravings, where a few authors in each region have a publicist.

I’ll let you know how it works out!

Tell us a little about yourself and your latest book.

Although I have lived or traveled in five continents, the last 30 years have been spent mostly in Washington, D.C. as a librarian, Congressional staff, speechwriter, editor, birdwatcher, kayaker, policy wonk, chair of a large volunteer program, and non-profit director. I am blessed with two fabulous grown children, the company of Iggy Pop the cat, and have published six romantic suspense novels. I now divide my time among Alexandria, Virginia, the Florida Gulf coast, and midcoast Maine.

My latest release is Mai Tais and Mayhem: Murder at Mote Marine (a Sarasota Romance). Set on the Florida Gulf coast, it follows the adventures of Tessa Diamond as she deals with new love, old love, murder, sea turtles, smugglers and the Russian mob, not necessarily in that order.

Mai Tais & Mayhem: Murder at Mote Marine (a Sarasota Romance)
Secret Cravings Publishing (January 2013)
eBook 65,000 words (208 pp)
Contemporary romantic suspense/mystery, M/F, 3 flames

When Tessa Diamond rescues a baby pufferfish from a hungry gull, her good deed leads her into a shady world of smuggling, Russian gangsters, and coded messages. She confronts murder, attempted ravishment, parrots, sea turtles and big fish, only to encounter blossoming romances at every turn, including one of her own.

She is torn between Cameron Mason, tiger-eyed and handsome, and Dugan Trevally, sexy and dangerous, but before she can drop her longstanding opposition to marriage and accept her true love, she must face the possibility that one of them could be a thief, and even a murderer.

Excerpt (PG): The first meeting

“Do you work here?”

Tessa jumped. A man stood next to her. Distracted by her ruminations on life and death, she at first only gave him a cursory once-over. His trim body and broad shoulders encased in a finely made dark suit hinted at strength. He wore a nametag, but the writing was too small for her to decipher without getting up close and personal with his chest. Once her eyes traveled up to his face, though, she wanted to. Very badly. Talk about hot.

He reminded her of a dream she’d had a few weeks earlier, in which a stranger held her in his arms and crooned a love song. Here in the flesh was her stranger. Dark blond hair feathered with gold, the mysterious tawny eyes of a stalking tiger, gently tanned skin drawn taut over the arched cheekbones, a nose…well, the nose could use some work. It tilted at an odd angle, presumably due to a collision with a blunt instrument sometime in the past. Tessa found it endearing.

“I repeat, do you work here?”

“I…uh…no. I don’t.” She indicated the nametag. “Do you?”

“Technically yes, only not in this building. I’m hoping you can tell me which door I use to get out. I mean, now that the aquarium’s closed.”

“It is? Oh damn.” She checked her watch. Sure enough, the minute hand showed ten minutes after five. “I guess we’d both better leave.”

Together they made a circuit of the doors, finding them all locked. Finally, the door to the gift shop gave to the combined pressure of four hands. Feeling like mischievous children, they crept past the ancient man counting money from the cash register. At the main entrance, her companion grinned at her. “Shall we make a break for it?”

Tessa smiled back and legged it out to the parking lot. She was rooting around in her bag for her keys when he caught up with her. “Hey, I didn’t catch your name.”

“Well, catch your breath first.” She waited, thinking he didn’t seem in very good shape despite his physique. Good. Otherwise he might have been too perfect. She didn’t want any complications in her life right now.

“Sorry,” he puffed. “I guess I haven’t entirely recovered from that bout with pneumonia.”

Damn.

“So, are you going to tell me your name? After all, we’re partners in crime now.”

“Tessa Diamond. And you are?”

“Cameron Mason. At your service.”

“Nice meeting you.” Tessa turned to her car. He cupped her elbow with a big, warm hand.

“Say, Ms. Diamond, can I interest you in a drink?”

“I don’t think…”

“You see, I was supposed to meet with the Lab director at five and he called in sick. Since I live up in Bradenton I really don’t want to schlep all the way back during rush hour. It would be nice to while away some time.” His lips curled in a tentative smile and she knew she’d have to give in. “You’d be doing me a favor. How does Tommy Bahama sound?”

Tessa gazed deep into his eyes, the green and brown intermixing in a steamy jungle of color. She woke up with a start when he touched her elbow again. “Miss Diamond?”

“Uh, sure. That would be fine.” Can you act any lamer, Tessa? But those eyes…

“My car or yours?”

“Er, why don’t I follow you?” She should at least make an attempt at keeping her distance. Anything to get away from that scent of his, a combination of dark rum and cinnamon, Very…tasty.

“Okay. I’m the tropical blue hybrid over there. The one with the I Love Caviar bumper sticker.”

“And I’m…” she stopped.

“The red Porsche. I know.”

Shut up, Tessa.

M._S._Spencer_2Buy Links: http://store.secretcravingspublishing.com/index.php?main_page=book_info&cPath=4&products_id=500

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Mai-Tais-and-Mayhem-ebook/dp/B00B3YJZJO

allRomanceEbooks: https://www.allromanceebooks.com/product-maitaisandmayhem-1046886-149.html
I’d love to hear from you!
Blog: http://msspencertalespinner.blogspot.com
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Interview with Lynda Hilburn

Please help me welcome my friend and fellow member of Colorado Romance Writers, Lynda Hilburn. Lynda has graciously agreed to give one winner signed copies of both THE VAMPIRE SHRINK and BLOOD THERAPY

Sterling_Blood_Therapy_cover_from_their_website_2What genre(s) do you write in and why?
I love paranormal, fiction and non-fiction. I think my work as a psychotherapist keeps me involved in the ongoing problems of “normal” people to such an extent that I love to lose myself in strange, non-ordinary worlds populated by extraordinary characters. And even if I’m writing about real things, the fact that the actors are vampires, ghosts, witches, wizards, psychics and other unusual individuals, keeps the storyline from being too mundane. I also plan to write psychologically-based fiction, such as romantic suspense and thrillers. I write now about a psychologist who treats vampires, and I’m sure a demented clinician will show up soon.

What is your typical day like?
I don’t think I have a typical day. I work as a psychotherapist for a community mental health center several days a week, so I usually don’t get any writing done those days. After being in that environment all day, it’s hard to clear my brain enough to be creative. On the other days, I see private clients, run errands, meet friends for lunch, think about cleaning my house, and get as much writing and promo done as possible. Then many weekends I schedule book signings or I attend conferences or other writing events. If I didn’t have my trusty day planner, my life would be even more chaotic than it already is.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?
I had an unusual experience. My first two novels were published by a small print publisher in 2007 and 2008. After that, we parted ways. My then-agent retained the ebook rights to the novels for me [because back then nobody was talking about ebooks!] After trying to sell the third book in my series to a new publisher without success [everyone kept telling me a series simply couldn’t move from one publishing house to another], I followed the advice of JA Konrath who was singing the praises of self-publishing. I found someone to covert my novels into digital formats, hired a cover artist and put the novels up on all the ebook outlets. That was March, 2010. Within a month, my novels were best sellers. I was stunned! I had also gotten the rights back to all my other small projects from the epubs I’d originally sold them to, and I uploaded those, as well. Everything was selling like gangbusters! Soon I was approached by another agent who wanted to represent me. I wound up selling the first two books plus a third in a blended deal with a UK and a USA publisher. In October, 2010 I took my copies of the novels down. From that point, the momentum seemed to deflate and my shorter works never told as well again. But since I have so many author friends who are wildly successful with self-publishing, I’ll keep writing things to upload – hopefully longer pieces. I just wish I had more time to write! People talk about the “golden age” of self-publishing being over. Well, I hope that’s not true!

Do you have critique partners?
Since I started writing fiction back in 2004, I have had many [many] critique partners. All critique partners are not equal. I believe that finding the right partners is a crucial element in the success of a publication-seeking writer. Now, because I don’t have as much time to reciprocate with my author friends [I’ll read yours, you’ll read mine], I hire beta readers. I have somehow managed to draw excellent writers to read my pages for horribly low wages. I’ve been very lucky. And I also work with editors. I can’t imagine submitting my work without having it read by as many quality eyes as possible. But the downside of crit partners is that some people seem to delight in raining on parades. Perhaps they aren’t really serious about getting published, or they’re just negative people, so they will go out of their way to criticize and diminish you. Beware of those folks. As they say about agents: a bad agent is worse than no agent. Same for critique partners.

Do you or have you belonged to a writing organization? Which one? Have they helped you with your writing? How?
I belong to a lot of writing organizations, but the first one I joined – Colorado Romance Writers [a local chapter of the mothership Romance Writers of America] – was the most influential for me. I had no idea there was such a huge, friendly group of writers available online. My passion for writing fiction came directly from my interactions with a couple of CRW members. Their support and encouragement made all the difference. And nobody has better resources than romance writers! They literally showed me a blueprint for writing a novel. Now, in addition to CRW, I am a member of NINC [Novelists, Inc], which is an excellent group of multi-published authors sharing cutting-edge information, Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers, Pikes Peak Writers, Fantasy, Futuristic and Paranormal writers, Mystery Writers of America [and the Rocky Mountain chapter], Sisters in Crime, and I’ve belonged to Horror Writers of America.

Tell us about your current series.
I write the Kismet Knight, Vampire Psychologist series. Book #1, The Vampire Shrink, has had many incarnations. It keeps rising from the dead. New book #2 is Blood Therapy and new book #3 contains parts of an earlier series novel, and it will be called Crimson Psyche. The series is about the continuing transformation and unfolding of the main character, Denver Psychologist Kismet Knight. After her first session with a new client – a young Goth named Midnight – Kismet is pulled into what she thinks is a role-playing community: people who want to be vampires. Turns out that’s just the tip of the coffin. Soon our intrepid heroine meets a drop-dead gorgeous, 800-year-old vampire named Devereux, a quirky FBI agent, a witch, ghosts, and several other unusual characters. From that moment, her life is never the same.

Links:
Website: http://www.lyndahilburnauthor.com
Blog: http://paranormalityuniverse.blogspot.com
FB: http://www.facebook.com/lyndahilburnauthor
Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/lyndahilburn

lyndaH044_pp_2Bio:

Lynda Hilburn writes the Kismet Knight, Vampire Psychologist series. After a childhood filled with invisible friends, sightings of dead relatives and a fascination with the occult, turning to the paranormal was a no-brainer. In her other reality, she’s a licensed psychotherapist, hypnotherapist, group facilitator, instructor, presenter and professional psychic/tarot reader.

Excerpt, BLOOD THERAPY by Lynda Hilburn

Ensconced on the white couch in my waiting room sat the blond god in question, decked out in his usual body-skimming, high-fashion black leathers. His thick platinum hair flowed
down his well-toned chest in the most touchable, inviting manner. Blue-green gemstone eyes sparkled.

A fallen angel.

He gave a devastating grin and Nicky gasped and fell to his knees, question forgotten. “Master!”

As always when Devereux was near, my body developed a mind of its own. My heart pounded, my mouth declared a drought, and my knees weakened. I blinked to clear the sudden fog and clutched the doorknob for support. I didn’t know what it was about him – perhaps it was his mystical vampire vibe, or maybe his personal charisma and raw sex appeal – but once again my brain cells refused to report for duty and my libido dimmed the lights.

My mouth fell open as a sharp pain radiated across my brow. I stared at him, and the room temperature suddenly spiked. Sweat beaded on my forehead and trickled between my breasts.

Whew! Did somebody turn up the heat in here? Maybe I should just take off a few of these clothes . . .

“Good evening, Doctor Knight,” said the gorgeous nightwalker, widening his dazzling smile as he rose in a fluid motion. “I hope I am not interrupting.”

Interrupting? Am I doing something? Oh, yeah. Counseling. Client. Psychologist. I remember.

I leaned towards Devereux and inhaled deeply.

There’s that amazing aroma. Spicy. Earthy. Sensual. Edible. Wait – what’s happening? Snap out of it, Kismet! Why does he always scramble my senses?

As I tried – and failed – to form coherent words or thoughts, Nicky speed-crawled across the floor and wrapped his arms like fleshy shackles around Devereux’s legs. He pressed his face against the supple leather. “Master! I can’t believe I’m in the same room with you. What an honor.”

Devereux arched an eyebrow, his disturbingly sensual lips gently lifting at the corners as he stared down at his devotee.

“Rise, child.”

Nicky lurched to his feet as if he’d been yanked up by invisible hands. A look of adoration on his face, he stared into Devereux’s eyes.

“Say goodnight to Doctor Knight and be on your way,” the Master crooned in his deep, vibrant voice.

His eyes still locked on Devereux’s, Nicky mumbled, “G’nite, Doctor,” then he turned, zombie-like, and shuffled out through the door into the hallway.

The usual struggle took me hostage: my body instinctively wanted to move towards Devereux like a flower bending to the sun, but my brain – at least, the tiny part that wasn’t missing in action thanks to his innate vampire juju – reminded me that I barely knew this attractive, scary male, and that I was tired of other people deciding what I should and shouldn’t
do.

I shook myself and blinked to break the spell Devereux’s appearance always cast on me, then I sucked in a deep breath and licked my dry lips. The pain in my head morphed from a bonfire to a simmer.
Why am I having so many headaches lately? Maybe I should have my eyes checked.
“That’s incredibly annoying, you know.”

“Annoying?” he asked, looking deceptively innocent. “To what are you referring?”

“Yeah.” I took a step back from the doorway, and from Devereux, in a vain attempt at self-control. “As if you didn’t notice the pseudo-lobotomy-without-anesthesia my brain gives itself whenever you show up. I thought you said I’d get used to your vibration, or your aura – whatever the vampire version is – and I’d stop turning into the village idiot in your presence. Oh, wait, no, I mean the hormone-riddled village idiot. But what am I saying? You probably like it.”

He laughed, which was even more annoying, and propped a shoulder against the doorjamb. “I promise you will acclimate.”

He pretended to pout, which wasn’t very effective because his mouth kept twitching as he fought a smile. “Soon I fear you will have no reaction at all to my arrival and I shall be reduced to competing with all your human suitors.”

I didn’t have any human suitors at the moment and he knew it: he’d cleared the decks. But that wasn’t anything I’d admit, or a subject I wanted to discuss, so I switched channels.

“What did you do to Nicky? Why was he walking so strangely?”

Devereux chuckled. “His body resisted the command I sent to his brain. He is too young to understand the futility of fighting a directive from one so many centuries older than himself. He will learn.”

He thinks mind control is amusing?

Interview with Ashlyn Mathews

Ashlyn, thank you for being here with me today. I love the eyes of the hero on your cover. They are piercing. Everyone, please help me welcome her by leaving lots of comments. You’ll be entered into the drawing for a copy of her book.

My_Fallen_Cover_2Tell us about your hero. Give us one of his strengths and one of his weaknesses?

In my latest paranormal romance, My Fallen, my hero Xavier Doom is the tall, dark and handsome kind of sexy with black hair, green eyes, muscular, and he’s a demon, which makes him especially dangerous. His greatest strength would be his ambition. But of course that’s his weakness because in his drive to be the best or the richest, he loses sight of what he later realizes are important — friendship and love.

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

Elise Castle is a Vampire Slayer of average height with long black hair, hazel eyes and a heart of gold. Her courage is her strength. She hunts beings no one else dares to go near while her self-reliance is her weakness. As a teenager she was abandoned by her father so she has trust issues, especially men like her father. Unfortunately, Xavier is a Fallen, a special type of demon. Elise’s father is one too. So you can see why she doesn’t want to rely on or fall in love with X.

Has your muse always known what genre you would write and be published in?

Yes. I love the world building of paranormal romances and also series potentials for the men in my books, My Fallen and Shadow Watcher. And as a fan of Japanese Anime, I love to incorporate swords, knives and guns into my books.

Do you have any words of inspiration for aspiring authors?

Prepare yourself for an emotional ride only you can understand. I sell a book, I’m happy. I get a bad review and I’m irritated or have a bad case of self-doubt. I don’t write for a few days and I get cranky. I realize I need to promote and I’m exhausted. While all this is happening, life goes on. I have a full time day job with an hour and a half commute each way, four boys, a husband, and my family and friends on top of keeping a presence on social media. Yes, it’s exhausting, time consuming and crazy, but it’s reality. However, surround yourself with people who truly care about you, and not you as the writer, and reality won’t be so harsh. And remember to keep your sense of humor and enjoy what you write. It’s cliché, but laughter is the best medicine .

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

My next project will be a self-published novella entitled Reclaimed. It’s the prequel to my full length paranormal romance, Shadow Watcher. I’m hoping to release it early March.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

It’s been very freeing. I enjoy the artistic freedom of designing my covers and the control of when my story is released. I don’t work on a traditional publisher’s schedule but my own. However, being the small fish in the big ocean, I don’t have the klout of a big publisher’s name behind me or access to their large base of loyal readers. So there are definitely advantages and disadvantages to both. I’ve been fortunate enough to be traditionally published yet I love the option and choice to self-publish too.

My contemporary novella, If Only, was self-published. My two paranormal romances, My Fallen and Shadow Watcher, were traditionally published. With the change in publishing on both fronts, this is an exciting time to be an author. I recommend writers research their options with the mindset of flexibility to choose a different path if the other didn’t work, to have realistic expectations, and to expect to do lots of self-promotion no matter which path they choose.

What is most difficult for you to write? Characters, conflict or emotions? Why?

It’s very difficult for me to write about emotions because I’m not an emotional person by nature. But boy, once the dams break, they break. So when I write, I search for the right words to convey the emotions, but sometimes my characters come off as being very bipolar, happy one moment, sad the next. That’s my biggest challenge and I’m well aware of it. Hopefully, by practicing, as in writing and more writing, I’ll be better at keeping the emotions in sync with the moment and the characters. Big sigh .

Ashlyn_Mathews_by_Sam_Meas_2Thank you, Cindy, for having me on your blog.

If you want to follow my roller coaster journey as a new author, my blog is www.ashlynmathews.com. I’m also on Twitter @ashlynmathews and Facebook http://www.facebook.com/ashlynmathewsauthor.

I also made a YouTube book trailer for My Fallen: http://youtu.be/df8lN9SUkz0

Don’t forget to download a copy of My Fallen on Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/My-Fallen-Crimson-Romance-ebook/dp/B00AWWONF4/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1358910655&sr=1-1&keywords=my+fallen
Or B&N: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/my-fallen-ashlyn-mathews/1114140315?ean=9781440562327

And leave a comment for a chance to win My Fallen for your Kindle or Nook.

Excerpt:
“If you want the truth, then I want something in return.”

Why wasn’t she surprised? “It depends on what you want.”

He took a step, and she held still as he cupped her face in his palms. “You don’t like Fallens. Forget I’m one.”

“Wha—”

“Forget I’m a Fallen and see me as a man.”

The expression on his face, highlighted by the glow from his eyes, told her he was dead serious. In return for him being truthful with her, she only needed to view him as a man instead of a monster? It seemed like an easy bargain. But—

“You won’t know if I’m being truthful or not,” he said. “You’re just going to have to take my word for it.” He smoothed the pads of his thumbs over her cheeks. “And I changed my mind. I don’t plan on staying away from you. Not after witnessing your nightmares.”

She staggered back. “You didn’t—”

“No, I didn’t read your thoughts, but I could see your face.” He advanced and she backed up, against the railing.

“It was either the floor or me plastered to you in the bed, Slayer. I don’t do well when a woman hurts as much as you did in your sleep.”

The concern in his voice blindsided her. He removed her sword out of her grip, placed her weapon on the top rail and leaned in close until his lips nearly touched hers.

“I’m going to kiss you, Elise Castle.”