Going to Romcon and have two tickets for lucky commenters

Do you want to attend Romcon?  Do you still need a ticket?  Romcon is this year from June 22 through June 24th?  I’m going and I look forward to meeting my fans.

I also have two general admission tickets to give away.  These tickets are worth $150 each.  All you have to do is tell me why you want to attend Romcon this year.  All comments for this blog and the one on the 17th will be entered for the drawing.  So you have two chances to win if you comment on both blogs.

There are so many things to do at Romcon.  I myself will be part of the Titanic Tea. There will be games and we’ll actually learn how to make and enjoy a high tea.

I am going to attend the “Build A Hero” workshop where we get to dress a gorgeous male model from the bottom up.  Now, now ladies get your mind out of the gutter.  He’ll have briefs on but we get to add the rest.

I’m attending a Monte Carlo night.  Hopefully I’ll do better with play money than I do with the real stuff.  And I can dress up to the nines if I want to though it is not required by any means.

Then there is speed dating, the author signing and so many other things to do that I can’t remember.  All of them related to the readers in all of us.  Do you think I go only as an author?  Heck no!  I’m a reader first and I’ll be as crazy to meet my favorite authors as you are.

I hope you’ll join me in Denver, June 22 – 24, for Romcon 2012.

Now to the special part of this post.  I have two general admission passes to Romcon to give away to my wonderful fans.  Just leave me a comment and tell me why you want to attend Romcon.  I’ll enter your name into the drawing.  These tickets are worth $150 each, so get your comment in now.

Interview with Sylvia McDaniel

Thank you Sylvia for being on my blog today.  Readers, Sylvia is going to give away a copy of her book to one lucky commenter.  Be sure and leave a comment or a question for Sylvia to be entered into the drawing.

How did you get started writing?

All my life I have been a voracious reader.  One day I read a particularly bad historical romance and thought, I could do a better job.  So I bought a typewriter (yes, this was before home computers) and started a book.  I quickly learned that it’s not as easy as it appears, but I finished that novel that terrible first draft and realized I loved writing.  At that point, I began the journey to learn how to craft stories. Along the way, I met some fantastic writers who not only taught me the craft, but some were my critique partners who helped guide me on this journey.  It took me three books and eight years before I published.  I published nine historicals with a major New York Publisher before I decided to go straight Indie.

Tell us about your current series.

My series, The Burnett Brides, is about a mother who has three older sons who are unmarried.  She wants grandchildren and decides to set them up with women she thinks will tame their wild souls. All three sons are equally headstrong, but each has his own set of personality quirks. Travis is headstrong and way too rigid.  He needs Rose to show him how to have fun. Tanner has a wounded soul and while he nurses Beth, she heals his soul. And Tucker is well, he’s running from marriage as fast as he can, right into the arms of Sarah. The one woman he loved years ago.

What is your favorite part of writing?

I love to storyboard an idea, so that I have the necessary map to take me on the journey. Then I sit down and I let the fingers fly on the keyboard, while the movie plays in my head.  I’m sort of the stenographer at his point, just getting the story down on paper. I hit roadblocks and things change along the way, but to me this is the best part of writing, just letting the story flow onto the page.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

My least favorite part of writing is the last draft.  At this point, I’ve edited the story 3-4 times. Usually around draft 5, I have everything the way I want and I’m going back through to make certain that the scenes work, end on a hook, setting, grammar, etc.  By the last draft, I’m ready for the story to end and to start thinking of a new project.

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

Right now, I’m working very hard to get my backlist on Amazon.  I’m also working on draft five of a Christmas Story that I plan to release the end of October. For me some stories just seem to grab me by the heart and refuse to let go. This story is like that. It’s the story of a man who doesn’t want Children and hates Christmas. So what did I do to him?  He finds out he has a daughter right at Christmas.  It’s called The Reluctant Santa and Colin, the hero, healing story is near and dear to me.

What is your typical day like?

I get up at six am, ride the elliptical for twenty minutes and then I’m off to the computer.  I work on the computer for an hour and then get ready for the day job.  The day job is working for a small insurance agency, where I take care of commercial insurance for clients.  I’m home at five thirty and back on the computer until supper time.  Eat a quick bite and then back on the computer until about nine o’clock, when the body wears out and the eyes start to see double.  I sit downstairs and watch several taped TV shows, until I crash into bed about eleven o’clock.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

I absolutely love self-publishing. I’m learning as I go, but I know that I don’t have the time to do everything, so I am hiring out editing, cover design and formatting.  That being said it’s really important that you find someone who is good at the formatting.  A Scarlet Bride had some formatting issues and I didn’t know until I had some readers complain.  I had the formatter correct the problem and now I’m back in business.  I loved selling to New York, but the books were not being distributed correctly, which meant readers couldn’t find them in stores and how can you sell books if they’re not available?  This way I am in charge of my own destiny and if I fail, it’s no one’s fault but my own.

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

I was scared to try. I also didn’t want to be seen as someone who was “vanity” publishing. It took me hearing from at least three people that this was the future and how successful they were before I decided to put out my backlist.  Now, I doubt I ever sell to another New York Publisher. I’m not a New York Times Bestseller yet, but I’m doing okay and I’m publishing again. I’m hearing from readers again. I’m back doing what I love and I’m not waiting for an editor or agent to send me a rejection letter any longer.  Now I’m working at my pace, not a publishers pace.  I’m happier than I’ve been in years and it just feels right for me. You have to decide what is right for you. Don’t listen to naysayers, check out what it takes and then do what’s best for you.

Short Excerpt

“I’ve waited years for a husband.”

Beth stopped in front of Tanner, her hazel eyes flashing indignantly. “To have someone who would wake up in my arms each morning, a bby to rock to sleep. Isn’t that what all women dream of? So why am I so bad for wanting the same things?”

“You’re not as long as you know I’m not good husband material.” Tanner took a deep breath and tried not to reflect on what he could see beneath her sheer nightgown. “But you think you can soothe my hurts and make me care about you enough that I’ll change my ways.”

“I don’t give a fig about your hurts.”

Tanner didn’t want to stop. “you think that beneath this rough exterior there’s a man worth saving, worth turning into a husband. You’re wrong.”

God, how he wanted her even when she was pushing him, making him feel things he’d long forgotten. He still wanted to feel her arms around him, even while he was trying his best to push her away.

“I have a man waiting for me. Why would I want a coldhearted bastard like you?”

“Because the man waiting for you, doesn’t make you feel like this,” he said as he pulled her into his arms.

How Does Pressure Shape Leaders? By Elisabeth Staab

A while ago I watched this great documentary about the inner workings of the FBI. The stress, as if we didn’t know, is tremendous for the agents who work in the Bureau. As someone who lives and works in the DC area, and who used to work with government agents, I’ve wondered why some of them seemed so damn serious. This documentary gave me a better appreciation.

Hell. I’d be tense, too.

I remember when a plane hit the Pentagon, and my friend’s father ran out of his office with a crack forming over the ceiling. And when we were all a little afraid to stop for gas near the beltway for fear of being shot at by a sniper. I remember that fear as a citizen. Thanks to this video, I got to see the pressure and blame these agents felt for not having been able to stop the attacks before they happened. The strain of working the cases and trying to catch the folks responsible in a timely manner. Wow. I saw men admit to shaky knees, and cry on camera. Men who said every day they left home worrying that they wouldn’t kiss their kids goodnight. Then there were men in charge like Hoover, who it seemed really let the pressure and the power make them a little bit crazy—literally crazy, it sounded like.

I would imagine there’s no greater pressure than on the president. The buck stops with him. Literally, the welfare of every person in the country is (or should be) his concern, but he can’t even begin to handle all the aspects of that himself. He has to rely on others to be his eyes and ears and to carry things out. Still, he’s elected to this position. He seeks it out with the belief that he has what it takes to handle the strain.

So one of the “what-ifs” in my head when I started King of Darkness, was what if had a leader who was born to the position, and thrust into the role before he was ready? What if he’d started as your standard cocky alpha, but then crisis after crisis on the heels of tragedy pushed him to the edge?

Well. Thad’s vampire communities are being attacked by villainous wizards. The fate of the race is in his hands, and if he doesn’t pull it together, everyone is doomed. But wait! There’s been a prophecy. One that has foretold a queen for him. Turns out though, the female in question is not really down with this whole prophecy business, so that’s another hurdle for hm. But maybe, just maybe, if he can get the right mate to be by his side, he will turn out to be the leader he needs to be…

About King of Darkness:

ETERNAL COMMITMENT IS NOT ON HER AGENDA…

Scorned by the vampire community for her lack of power, Isabel Anthony lives a carefree existence masquerading as human–although drifting through the debauched human nightlife, she prefers the patrons’ blood to other indulgences. But when she meets the sexy, arrogant king of the vampires, this party-girl’s life turns dark and dangerous.

BUT TIME’S RUNNING OUT FOR THE KING OF THE VAMPIRES…

Dead-set on finding the prophesied mate who will unlock his fiery powers, Thad Morgan must find his queen before their race is destroyed. Their enemies are gaining ground, and Thad needs his powers to unite his subjects. But when his search leads him to the defiant Isabel, he wonders if fate had gotten it seriously wrong…

Excerpt:

…He had already admitted that he was falling for Isabel. In a big way. That seemed like a misnomer, really. Not that he had much experience with this sort of thing, but once you realized you were falling in love with someone, wasn’t it already too late? He shook his head slowly against the door. Yeah, might as well admit it.

Thad Morgan really was in love.

To truly claim it, even if only to himself, lifted him up. It loosened the hard squeeze around his heart that had nagged him quietly since he’d first met Isabel and made him stronger. Somehow, he would find a way to work this out with her. Get her to hold on until he could court her properly. Show her how good it could be with him and how he could take care of her. Clearly, her life had been rather solitary, except for her friendship with Alexia, and he wanted so much to take care of her.

It was something he had desperately needed. He just hadn’t known that before now.

“Damn,” he whispered to the air molecules in the silent hallway. “Now what?”

From the moment he was born, Thad had been groomed for the position he was now to fill, yet he had always been too overwhelmed by the enormity of the role to take it seriously. He was ashamed to admit that he’d stuck his head in the sand and naively assumed that his father would continue to rule until he retired to the Council of Elders on his one thousandth birthday. In theory, Thad should have had another century to get accustomed to all of the responsibility that now sat squarely on his shoulders.

Part of him still secretly felt like the ten-year-old boy who had gleefully tromped up and down the hallways of this house, swimming in his father’s boots. It was time now to put on the big-boy pants and grow a pair. If he didn’t, Isabel would never trust him to take care of her. Nor would the rest of their kind. Then it would only be a matter of time before the race fell to its enemies…

King of Darkness is available at:  Amazon : Barnes and Noble : IndieBound: Book Depository

Elisabeth Staab still lives with her nose in a book and at least one foot in a fantasy world. Her bestselling paranormal romance novel, King of Darkness, is available now. Her second book, Prince of Power, releases in January. Find out more at ElisabethStaab.com or sign up for her newsletter.

 

An Interview with Christine Hughes

Please help me welcome Christine Hughes to my blog today.  Remember to leave a comment to be entered into the prize drawing.

1. What inspired your latest book?

I wrote a few paragraphs and saved them on my computer. Months went by and I hadn’t thought about them, hadn’t thought about writing at all actually. Then I was told I was losing my job due to budgetary constraints. My husband had been telling me that I should “do something” with writing and I had always blown him off.

While cleaning up my computer, I found the file with those few paragraphs, printed them out and read them almost daily for a little while. Then one night I was watching The Vampire Diaries, the one with the Founder’s Day ball and Stefan had gone all vampy so Damon had to step in and dance with Elena. Well, the song that was played while they danced in called “All I Need” by Within Temptation. That song flashed a whole book through my head and I began to make a playlist that surrounded those ideas. Once I had my playlist, I began to expand on those paragraphs (that eventually became the prologue) until I finished TORN.

2. What is your least favorite part of writing?

Editing and revising is by far the worst part for me. It’s so hard for me to find little issues like comma usage, grammatical mistakes and such because I wrote it. I find it hard to slow myself down and really look at what I wrote. When it comes to revisions, I can be so difficult. I’ll never complain to an editor out loud, or I haven’t needed to, but when I’m asked to change a scene, it hurts me. I wrote it so l like it best how it’s written. Then again, once it’s changed due to recommendations or whatever, then I can usually see their point of view and realize all that shouting I’ve done in my head had done nothing but give me a headache.

3. Where do you get the ideas for your stories?

Music. I am in no way musically inclined. As a matter of fact, my singing voice might be better compared to nails on a chalkboard than anything remotely melodic. But, for some reason, music inspires me. Not the melody but the lyrics. If I can see the story in the words, then I can base a character, a plot, an emotion on them.

4. Give us an elevator pitch for your book.

TORN: When Samantha’s father dies and she finds out her life isn’t what it seems, she must join the fight between two groups of fallen angels, the Faithful and the Exiled, in a race to save humanity. In spite of the unforgivable betrayal of her best friend, the newly acknowledged love for her guardian angel, the face to face confrontation of the dark angel who killed her father and the growing need to allow darkness to take over her being, Samantha has been charged making the choice between fighting alongside the Faithful or succumbing to the darkness of the Exiled.

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

Writing space? I seem to be a traveler. While I was writing TORN, it was the summer and I tended to wake up very early and sit outside as often as I could and get as many words down before everyone else woke up. I’d send the kids outside to play and I’d be on the deck with my mac book and playlist.
When I started writing Three Days of Rain I started off doing the same thing but for some reason it wasn’t quite working. I eventually made my way to my local Barnes & Noble. People watching with my grande earl grey coupled with a new playlist and earbuds pushed me through that manuscript in less than six months.

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

No. I haven’t found a reason for me to do so. I’m not against it and I totally get why some people do but I don’t need to. At least not now.

7. What are you currently working on?

I am currently working on revisions and edits for a manuscript that is totally out of my comfort zone. Three Days of Rain took so much for me to write and I don’t want to change anything but I know I have to. Other than that, I’m figuring out where my third manuscript will take me. I’m thinking psychological thriller but I’m not totally sure yet.

TORN BLURB:

When Samantha’s father dies and she finds out he was an angel because of what he was protecting, she must join the fight between two groups of fallen angels, the Faithful and the Exiled, in a race to save humanity. In spite of the unforgivable betrayal of her best friend, the newly acknowledged love for her guardian angel, the face to face confrontation of the dark angel who killed her father and the growing need to allow darkness to take over her being, Samantha has been charged making the choice between fighting alongside the Faithful or succumbing to the darkness of the Exiled.

 

 EXCERPT

Chapter 1

September
The Cabin

Run, Samantha. Don’t look back. Just run.

I repeated this mantra over and over again as I sprinted through the trees. Focused, like my life depended on it and knowing that one day it would, I ran. Through the damp woods, past branches that tore at my skin, and hurdling over logs, I ran. My breath mingled with the crisp fall air but I didn’t feel the cold. I felt nothing but the pure and relentless adrenaline that pumped through my veins. As the sun rose and cast its broken beams through the trees, I ran. With only a single thought: I have to get there.

I knew he was following me. He was close. So close. I couldn’t let him catch me.
My legs carried me over slick moss and rotting bark. I flew over downed trees, grabbing for branches to help me over. I was fast. Faster than before. Faster than yesterday. My focus was singular. The task at hand was all I could think about. Get through, Sam. Faster, Sam. Jump, Sam.

I swore I could navigate those woods with my eyes closed. I could see the next obstacle that lay ahead of me yards before it came into view. And when I concentrated hard enough, those obstacles began to disappear.

I burst into the clearing and could faintly make out his barely labored breathing behind me. He was so close I could smell him. I dug in and pumped my legs faster. Always faster. I knew I was going to beat him this time. I had to. I closed in on my destination. All I had to do was jump. I had to make it over the water. Over the creek on the other side of the clearing.

Samannnnnnthaaaa…. Run!

The intrusive voice pulsed through me and drowned out the mantra in my head, breaking my rhythm and I stumbled over a rock I was sure hadn’t been there yesterday.

Damn it! The eerily familiar voice that had settled comfortably in my head like a squatter, had the worst timing It teased like a schoolyard bully and I wanted to scream. But I couldn’t. I had to run. I was almost there. Come on, Sam. Fifty feet. Forty feet. Thirty feet. Almost there. As I braced my body for the jump over the swollen creek, he caught my ankles in mid-air and dropped me to the ground with a bone jarring tackle onto the muddy bank.

“Son of a bitch,” I growled.

I fought back, jumping up the way I was taught, fists at the ready. I caught him off guard, for the first time, with a jab to the chin and a roundhouse to the stomach. Then I did a back spring, landing well out of his reach and quickly regrouped. The grin on his face as he rubbed his chin told me I surprised him with that one. And now I was in trouble.

“Lucky shot, Sam. Nice kick. Too bad this one’s on me.” His cocky bravado triggered an extra jolt of adrenaline inside me. He’s not gonna take this round. Not this time.

For a few seconds we circled each other, anticipating the other’s next move. He crouched and lunged at my knees. I jumped to grab the branch above me and he missed, sprawling out in the dirt. But not for long. He was on his feet again before I’d even let go of the tree, his eyes merely blue slits of predatory focus. I had a total of three seconds to figure out my next move before he lunged again, targeting me mid-waist.

Instinctively, I dropped to the ground, and sprung forward, drilling him into the trunk of the nearest tree. Rain had started to fall, shrouding the sound of my movements as I quickly disappeared behind the brush. I needed to work out how to nail him with an element of surprise.

He growled in frustration but his annoyance didn’t matter. I was winning. I could feel it.

My hands and knees were scraped and dirty. My hair was a tangled mess and the sudden rise in humidity brought on by the rain wasn’t helping. The scent of decaying vegetation around me did nothing to mask the stench of my sweat.

His voice taunted me. “Come out, come out wherever you are. You can’t hide from me forever. You think you can camouflage yourself from me? I can smell you.”
Think, Samantha.

He was right. I couldn’t sit there all day getting soaked in the rain waiting for him to find me. Through a small gap between the leaves, I could see him looking, scanning the trees and underbrush. Then his eyes focused where I crouched. I needed to act, now.

The forces of nature seemed to heed my need for action and the sky erupted, complete with booming thunder and darting strikes of lightning. I belly crawled behind bushes until I was on his right. His eyes still boring into the spot I’d just vacated, he took a step forward.

I slowly stood and crept up next to him. He turned around and I caught his cheek with a right hook but he grabbed my hair and yanked my head back. I yelled, in surprise and pain. The look on his face made him almost unrecognizable and for a moment I was paralyzed as the maniacal voice stole through me once again.

Samannnnnnthaaaa… Run!

He took advantage of my shock and swept my legs out, dropping me face first into a vat of mud.

So not how I had envisioned this ending.

BIO

A former Army brat, Christine Hughes moved quite often. She spent much of her time losing herself in books and creating stories about many of the people she’d met. Falling in love with literature was easy for her and she majored in English while attending college in New Jersey. Not sure where her love of reading and writing fit, she became a middle school English teacher. After nine years of teaching others to appreciate literature, she decided to take the plunge and write her first novel. Now at home focusing on making writing her new career, she spends her time creating characters and plot points instead of grading papers.

Music has become an integral part of her writing process and without the proper play list, Hughes finds the words don’t flow. At least a few times a week she can be found at the local Barnes & Noble with her Mac and headphones working on her next novel. Her YA novel Torn will be released by Black Opal Books in June 2012.

3 Interesting Facts:

1. I attended 13 different schools, including college, due to my family’s military relocations.

2. I met my husband when I was 14.

3. My favorite book of all time is Ray Bradbury’s Fahrenheit 451.

 

I’m going to Romcon, come join me.

Are you going to Romcon this year from June 22 through June 24th?  I am and I look forward to meeting my fans.  There are so many things to do at Romcon.  I myself will be part of the Titanic Tea. There will be games and we’ll actually learn how to make and enjoy a high tea.

I am going to attend the “Build A Hero” workshop where we get to dress a gorgeous male model from the bottom up.  Now, now ladies get your mind out of the gutter.  He’ll have briefs on but we get to add the rest.

I’m attending a Monte Carlo night.  Hopefully I’ll do better with play money than I do with the real stuff.  And I can dress up to the nines if I want to though it is not required by any means.

There are intimate chats with some of your favorite authors.  Just you the author and 12-14 other people.  Very small and a great way to get to know that author you’ve always wanted to meet.

Then there is speed dating, the author signing and so many other things to do that I can’t remember.  All of them related to the readers in all of us.  Do you think I go only as an author?  Heck no!  I’m a reader first and I’ll be as crazy to meet my favorite authors as you are.

I hope you’ll join me in Denver, June 22 – 24, for Romcon 2012.  See you there.

Memorial Day by Michele Drier

This Memorial Day, my youngest niece will be in Washington, D.C. getting an orientation to NOAA.  She’s thrilled to have won NOAA scholarships and internships for her last two years of college.

Her mom suggested that she go to Arlington Cemetery on Memorial Day itself, to watch the ceremonies.

We’re a pacifist family, but all of us support and relate to the individuals, and their families, who have fought and lost their lives in the military.

My niece is 20, so she’s spent half her life hearing about the wars we’re fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan.

As an early Baby Boomer, I saw the Korean War in newsreels before the Saturday movie matinee.  Then, I watched the Vietnam War unfold on my television while eating dinner.  And when I saw the memorial wall on a visit toWashington, I was overcome.

I’m not sure most people actually remember that these were individual young men.  Many of them weren’t old enough to legally drink when they were killed.

But when I think of the military, I think of the 19- and 20- and 21-year olds—boys, really—who fought in the Second World War.

I don’t remember it first-hand, but I learned about it second-hand, from a man I married who was a Holocaust survivor.  He was older than me, a German Jew who’d been sent to an orphanage in France by his parents after Kristallnacht.  Because of this, he was the only member of his family to survive.

And through him, I met people in the U.S.and Europe who had also survived, many of them with numbers still tattooed on their arms.  They were from Germany, Poland, Hungary, France, Belgium and had one thing in common; they were Jewish.

That’s when I began to realize that the Second World War, or any war, wasn’t an abstract idea of troop movements and weaponry, but a massive fear and displacement of individuals.

On June 5, 1998, I was driving along the coast of Normandy with my daughter, headed for Amsterdam, when we saw a convoy of Army jeeps.  We pulled over and realized we were standing on the French coastline above one of theNormandybeaches.  The German bunkers were still entrenched, overlooking the Channel.  Miles and miles of rusting fortifications and ships poked up from the shallow waves.  Standing at the cliff’s edge in a fine drizzle, we tried to imagine what it must have been like more than 50 years ago when the landing force of young men looked up at those cliffs.

The survivors of that force, plus hundreds of thousands more young men, fought their way through France and into Germany over the next 10 months and the fate of European Jews and the fate of hundreds of young GIs came together with stunning clarity at Dachau Concentration Camp on April 29, 1945.  That day, the American troops liberated their first German concentration camp and saw the horror the Nazis had inflicted on innocent people.

My mystery, Edited for Death, is contemporary, but World War II is the backdrop for three murders in a small town in California’s Sierra Nevada foothills in 2006.  And the liberation of Dachau plays a pivotal role when a young and drifting American soldier finds himself facing the true definition of war.

I hope my niece makes it to Arlington Cemetery on Memorial Day. And I know she’ll remember the individual young men her age who were never able to get any older.

For me, I’ll remember the generation of 20-year-olds, and the millions of innocents, who met in spring of 1945 and changed the world for the better.

BIO

Michele Drier was born in Santa Cruz and is a fifth generation Californian.  She’s lived and worked all over the state, calling both Southern and Northern California home.  During her career in journalism — as a reporter and editor at daily newspapers – she won awards for producing investigative series.

Her mystery Edited for Death, called “Riveting and much recommended” by the Midwest Book Review and a Memorable Book for 2011 on Dorothy L, is available in paperback at Amazon and B&N.

Her paranormal romance series, SNAP: The Kandesky vampire chronicles, is available in ebook at Amazon.  The first book, SNAP: The World Unfolds, received a 4-star rating from the Paranormal Romance Guild.  The second book, SNAP: New Talent, is now published and also available from Amazon

Visit her website: www.micheledrier.com

A Visit with Robin Helm

Please help me welcome Robin Helm to my blog.  Also, be sure and leave a comment for the prize drawing.

 

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

I use my own name when I write because I have a large family and acquaintances strewn over several states and countries. I want them to be able to find my work easily. In addition, I intend never to write anything that I would not want people to know I authored. The knowledge that former students, friends, and family will know that I wrote the material holds me to a certain standard. I very much doubt that I will ever reach the level of fame which would make it dangerous for people to know my real name.

 

What are you currently working on? 

I am nearly finished writing Legacy, the third book in The Guardian Trilogy.  Chapters 12 through 18 are in the rewriting stage, though most of that work is done, and I am presently writing chapter 19. I plan to have 20 chapters in the book, unless my betas (editors) keep telling me I am finishing the book in too much of a hurry. I don’t want the ending to drag, but I also don’t want to disappoint my readers by rushing the story.

 

What do you have planned for the future? 

I will begin to outline and write my next book, Darcy’s Wish, as soon as I finish Legacy. It will be a relief to start writing the story, as it is presently fighting to get out of my head. The Guardian Trilogy is romance fantasy fiction, and the next book will be as well. Darcy’s Wish will take place in modern and Regency times simultaneously. My premise is that Jane Austen’s characters in Pride and Prejudice  were actual people.

 

BIO
Robin Helm has published the first two volumes of a trilogy (The Guardian Trilogy), Guardian and SoulFire, and is presently writing Legacy, the third and final volume, posting as a work in progress on four different forums. She has also published three Regency short stories.

She and her husband have two daughters, the elder a Navy nurse stationed in Guam, and the younger a university senior. They live in South Carolina with their Yorkie-Poo, Tobey.

Ms. Helm graduated with a BA from Piedmont International University. She is a member of the Delta Epsilon Chi honor society, the American Legion Auxiliary, and the scholarship faculty of the United States Achievement Academy.

 

Blurb for Guardian, Volume I of The Guardian Trilogy

In Guardian, a religious fantasy fiction, the powerful and imposing Xander/Darcy, Chief of Guardian Angels, has protected exceptional humans from demonic forces over the course of ten millennia without losing a single battle. In 1989, he receives an unusual assignment which will forever change his ordered existence and alter the course of human history. Will he lose the battle for his own heart while guarding supernaturally gifted Elizabeth Bennet from the evil which surrounds her? Will he be strong enough to resist her as she grows from a precocious child into a beautiful, intelligent woman? The veil dividing the physical and spiritual planes is drawn aside to reveal warfare on an unprecedented scale as Elizabeth develops her gifts and her guardian discovers his emotions.

Synopsis

Guardian begins with a prologue, the fall of Lucifer from heaven. The main body of the work concentrates on the years beginning just prior to Elizabeth’s conception in 1989 and ends in the fall of 2007 as she begins her junior year in college and Xander is summoned before God to make a momentous decision.

 

Blurb for SoulFire, Volume II of The Guardian Trilogy

In the second volume of The Guardian Trilogy, Fitzwilliam Alexander Darcy, powerful Chief of all guardian angels, adjusts to life with a dual nature. An angel/human, Darcy seeks to win the love of his beautiful partner in SoulFire Ministries, Elizabeth Bennet, as they travel together across the globe. While keeping his true identity hidden, Darcy joins archangels Michael and Gabriel in defending and protecting Elizabeth from the schemes and trickery of Gregory, the Dark Prince, and Lucifer, his father.

Though the supernaturally gifted team of Darcy and Elizabeth is tremendously successful in their joint mission as they partner with evangelist Jonathan Edwards, the question remains, will Elizabeth find the strength within herself to forgive Darcy for his secrecy after she accidentally discovers the truth, that he was her guardian angel, or will Gregory be ultimately successful in separating this match made in heaven?
Synopsis

SoulFire, Volume II of the trilogy, continues the story, picking up January, 2008 and ending in August of the same year. Xander is in human form, using the name Fitzwilliam Darcy. SoulFire develops the actual meeting, ministry, and romance of Elizabeth and Darcy.

The Guardian Trilogy is a Christian fantasy fiction which loosely incorporates elements of Jane Austen’s masterpiece, Pride and Prejudice, into a Christian story line. Mrs. Helm is presently writing the third book in the series, Legacy.

 

 

An Interview with Lori Dillon

Please help me welcome Lori Dillon to the blog today.  Lori will be giving away an electronic copy of her book to one lucky commenter so be sure and leave a comment or question for Lori.

How did you get started writing?

I wasn’t one of those people born with a pen in my hand. Well, not a writing pen, but maybe a drawing pencil. I’ve always been an art geek. I have a BFA in Graphic Design and Illustration. Before doing the stay at home mom thing, I worked for 14 years as a graphic designer.

To be honest, I came pretty late to the romance novel fan club. As a teen, I read mostly horror. Stephen King, John Saul, and that staple of adolescent girls at the time, the Flowers in the Attic series. I didn’t discover romance novels until I was 28, when I was newly engaged and enthralled with all things romantic. So when I found one of my roommate’s romance novels lying around, I picked it up and read it cover to cover in one day. Needless to say, I was officially hooked!

Of course, we all know there are good books, keeper books, and wall-banger books out there. After one too many paperbacks hit the drywall, my husband dared me to write a book myself. So I did, and I amazed myself that I actually finished it. (Completing projects is not my strong suit.) I entered the novel in several writing contests and it finaled a few times. Hey, what do ya know? I didn’t totally suck as a writer. Although now that I know better, that book will forever remain under the bed keeping the lonely dust bunnies company. So I wrote another book, which ended up being OUT OF THE ASHES. That novel landed me an agent and came really, really close to selling to a New York publisher.

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

I pretty much stick to paranormal historicals. I love being transported to another time and place. And when you throw a little magic in the mix, how can you not love it? For now, my paranormals are not what’s all the rage—you know, the dark, sexy immortal brotherhood, each warrior in search of their soul mates. I love to read those books (love me some Kresley Cole and Gena Showalter), but I have yet to write one of them. Try as I might, my inner comic comes out and can’t help but dribble humor all over my books. I’m not saying I never will write the dark, tortured immortal warrior series. I just have too many out-of-the-box paranormals that are clamoring around in my head to be written first. I’ve got a gothic time travel (it’s a spoof on Jane Eyre) and a medieval series (they’re a mix of shape shifters and time travels) that I hope to have out later this year.

What inspired your latest book?

David and Sera’s story started out with the idea that if a cat could have 9 lives, why not people? My initial thought was to write short vignettes of their first eight lives, starting from when they meet each time until their untimely deaths, then end the book with their 9th life where they finally get it right. Unfortunately, a book like that would’ve ended up being a War and Peace behemoth. So I decided to focus on their first and last lives, and just hint at the tragedy of their other lives that came in between.

While I was doing research for possible time periods and settings, I came across a National Geographic photograph of a plaster cast of a couple from Pompeii. The man and woman died in each other’s arms as they tried to flee the city, forever frozen in time, his hand shielding her face in a vain attempt to protect her. The cast is beautiful, touching, and heartbreaking. In fact, I use a photo of that exact cast from the Pompeii Exhibit taken by photographer Ken Thomas on the back cover of the print book. (You can see his original photo here.) I began to wonder what their story might have been, and the tragic couple eventually evolved into a young Pompeian girl and the slave gladiator she loved. Then I wondered what might have happened if they were given a second chance.

What is your favorite part of writing?

Hearing from readers that they’ve enjoyed the book is the best thing evva! I used to be a contest diva back in my pre-published days. A few weeks ago, a contest judge blogged about how she’d judged the first few chapters of ASHES in the Golden Heart Contest years ago and has been waiting ever since for it to be published so she could finish reading it (http://tinyurl.com/blh92ty). I swear, I cried like a baby when I read her post. Being able to touch a reader like this is why I do what I do.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

Keeping the word count down. I’m a wordy writer. I find it hard to keep a book under 120,000 words. ASHES originally clocked in at 124,000 words. I managed to trim it down to 110,000. DRAGON weighed in at a whopping 137,000 words. I’ve got it down to 120,000 now and I’m still cutting. Ugh.

Where do you get the ideas for your stories?

They come from all difference things. I already talked about where the idea for ASHES came from. I can’t remember how GOTHIC came to life (most likely it was while I was watching a BBC version of Jane Eyre?), but I can definitely recall the moment DRAGON (the first in my medieval time travel series) came to me. My daughter was having her 6th birthday party and she was so sick of going to princess parties that she insisted on having a dragon party. After hand making dragon hand puppets, a pin the flame on the dragon poster, and 3D a dragon cake (complete with blue tortilla chips down the back for its spines—it was actually quite cool looking), I was on dragon overload. While I was up to my elbows in suds doing dishes one night, the idea of a modern woman being send back in time and sacrificed to the local dragon came to mind. Then I thought it would be a lot of fun if the dragon was actually a dragon slaying knight cursed to be the creature he once hunted. The story took on a life of its own from that moment on.

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

Hire a good professional editor (not your mom, your sister, or the English teacher down the street). I’m a firm believer that no author, even those who’ve been published for years by NY, should edit their own work. At some point, you’re just too close to it and can’t see the mistakes staring you in the face. I thought I had a decent grasp of the English language, but after having two editors go over ASHES, I’ve discovered I have comma issues. *G* Oh, and if you don’t have an artistic bone in your body, hire a good cover artist, too. Unfortunately, people do judge a book by its cover. Your novel may be the next Gone With the Wind, but if your cover looks like a 4 year old slapped it together with magazine cutouts and a glue stick, they’ll never see beyond the bad artwork to find out.

Do you have critique partners?

I used to be in a critique group. But I’m not a linear writer. I tend to jump around, working on the scenes that are screaming in my head to be written as opposed to writing chapter 1, then chapter 2, then chapter 3. I might work on the cute-meet today, the black moment tomorrow, and then the love scene the next day. It’s a process that works for me, but it makes it nearly impossible to critique my work until it’s pretty much done. I’ve decided at this point in my career, beta readers will serve me better. BTW, I’m on the hunt for a few good beta readers, so if anyone’s interested, shoot me an email!

What is your favorite dessert/food?

Snow crab legs. Any time there’s a birthday or special occasion, it’s always celebrated with all you can eat crab legs in our family. Pass the butter, please.

Was your road to publication fraught with peril or a walk in the park?

Definitely no walk in the park. After I wrote my first book (the aforementioned dust bunny babysitter), I wrote ASHES. One of the first agents I queried signed me, so in that aspect, I did hop on the fast train. I thought, “Sweet! I made it to the big time with my second book.” Not so fast. Although my agent loved it, NY had ‘issues’ with the WWII time period. Apparently it has cooties as far as they’re concerned. The book made its way up the editorial ladder at one NY publishing house and they asked me to reset the WWII part as a contemporary.

After a lot of soul searching, I had to say no. It would have changed the characters and the story too much. So I put ASHES away and waited for NY to come around. They never did, so I self-published it. It was the best decision I ever made. I love the control, the ability to say THIS is how this story needs to be told. And being able to design my own book covers really appeals to the graphics geek in me.

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

Oh, yes. Once my kids were old enough to no longer require my attention 24/7, I turned the sunroom—which was their playroom until about 6 years ago—back into a sunroom. It’s on the 2nd story and has huge windows on 3 sides with views of the woods behind our house and the babbling creek that cuts through our backyard. I’ve had deer, fox, hawks, and a wild turkey traipse by while I’m writing. You’d never know we live in a suburban neighborhood. I have a lounging couch by one of the windows that I pretty much live in, with my laptop on—what else?—my lap.

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

David is a closet beta forced to be an alpha. He abhors the idea of taking another person’s life. Unfortunately, being born a slave gladiator and then again as a soldier in WWII, he’s had little choice but to kill others if he wants to live. I’ll let you in on a little secret—he’s much braver than he thinks he is.

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

Sera is a head-strong woman in a man’s world. All her life, she’s had to fight for respect and recognition as an archeologist. But behind the strong façade, she’s still the lost and lonely girl from her past life—until David comes along to rock her world.

EXCERPT:

David must have sensed her presence. Turning, he leaned a broad shoulder against the crumbling wall and gazed down on her from his high perch, casually sticking a blade of dry grass in the corner of his mouth.

“I wasn’t sure if I’d be welcome here this morning.”

She was struck by how fluent his Italian was. His voice sounded so calm, so relaxed. Did he feel half as uneasy as she did? If he did, he hid it well.
“And I wasn’t sure if you’d be here at all,” she replied.

He shrugged and rolled the piece of grass from one side of his mouth to the other.

“I almost didn’t come. I figured instead of you, I’d have the Italian guard waiting with a complimentary blindfold and cigarette.”

“Don’t think I didn’t consider turning you in a half a dozen times last night.”

David jumped down from the wall, startling her, and she took an involuntary step back. Just how dedicated was he to this mission? Did he see her as the threat she saw him? Would he kill her if she got in the way? Was he even now planning a way to silence her forever?

Closing the gap between them in four quick strides, he stood so close she swore he could feel her heart pounding even though he wasn’t touching a single inch of her.

“So, why didn’t you?”

Why did he have to stand so close? She glanced down at his hands hanging loose at his sides. Strong hands that could easily wrap around her neck and squeeze the life out of her before she could utter a sound.

“I promised you I wouldn’t.”

“People break promises all the time.”

Her eyes shot back to his face. Whether he knew it or not, he’d hit a nerve. She tried to pretend telling Maria didn’t count.

“Not me.”

For a long time he just stared at her. She wondered what secrets he saw, what vulnerability he might sense deep inside and use against her. Regardless, Sera refused to retreat.

“I know.” He spoke in English, his voice so low it was almost a whisper. “That’s why I trusted you enough to come back.”

Now it was her turn to look into his face and search for the truth. His soft brown eyes showed nothing but trust, full and complete. But then again, she’d been wrong about men before.

He tilted his head to the side, and the slight movement blocked out the morning sun in the sky behind him, creating the effect of a glowing halo around his handsome face. But she reminded herself that he was no angel. He was a spy.

She stepped back, needing to put some space between them, and tripped over the forgotten shovel David had thrown in anger yesterday. Her arms spun around, grasping for balance in the air as she felt herself falling. He reached out to grab her, but her feet tangled with his, and they both crashed to the ground.
David raised himself up on his arms above her, concern evident as his eyes flicked over her face.

“Are you okay?”

“I’m fine, except for the fact that I have a shovel digging into my back, and you weigh a ton on top of me.”

A slow grin crept across his face, the boyish charm he flashed sending her heartbeat into double-time. He reached beneath her and eased the shovel handle out from under the small of her back. After tossing it to the side, he looked back down at her, his upper body hovering over her with his arms braced on either side of her face.

“Better?”

“You’re still on top of me.”

The grin slowly faded. “So I noticed.”

BIO

In a previous life, Lori worked as a graphic designer for fourteen years for the power company, occasionally venturing into nuclear power plants for her job (yes, nuclear plants need graphic designers, too). In her current existence, she weaves tales of the past, the present, and some places only magic can take you.

Lori lives in Virginia with her engineering geek/hero husband, two kids who test her sanity on a daily basis, a dog named Hokie (named after the Virginia Tech Hokies, of course), and various other critters of the furred and finned variety.

Sneak Peek – Coming Soon – The Swords of Gregara – RIZA

This is a Sneak Peek of book 2 in The Swords of Gregara series, RIZA.  The first book was The Swords of Gregara – JENALA.  I hope you enjoy this little peek into my newest book.   If you leave me a comment I’ll put your name in a drawing for a paperback copy of Centauri Dawn.  The first book in my Centauri Series – Cynthia Woolf

CHAPTER 1

“Ow!  Are you trying to kill me, Doc?”

The man was understandably nervous, but he had to allow her to set his leg.  She knew he was in a lot of pain.  The bone stuck out through the skin and he had lost a lot of blood, but he needed to relax so she could set the leg.

“I haven’t even started yet.  Stop being a baby.  Here we go.  You’ll feel a little pinch in your neck, then count backwards from one hundred.”

“Ouch!  Little pinch!”

“Count, now!”

“One hundred, ninety-nine, ninety-eight, ninety-seven, ninety….”

“Finally.”  Riza worked quickly, not sure just how long he would stay out.  She opened his leg, surgically implanted two kalcion rods and several screws to secure them to the bones.  It would have been so much easier with a med-tech unit.  But there were none on Gregara.  They weren’t allowed.  There were many things on the other civilized planets that weren’t allowed here, like blasters, but for some reason blasters always seemed to make it through the customs process.  In Ruciem it seemed that as many people carried blasters as carried the traditional kalcion sword.

Most of the planet preferred to keep their customs, barbaric as they were.  They used swords, not blasters and preferred the body to heal itself without help from technology.  It made her work much more difficult.  A broken leg like this one could have been healed in a few hours in a med-tech unit.

She stitched everything closed.  Doing surgeries like this one allowed her to keep her skills sharp.  It may not be necessary, but this man would have the smallest stitches ever put on a leg repair.  Her skills as a plastic surgeon might not be usable here, but that didn’t mean she couldn’t keep her stitching up to par.

With her patient now awake and groggy, Riza went to talk to the next of kin.  There was only one man in the waiting room.  An extremely attractive man, if you liked handsome in a rugged sort of way.  He hadn’t shaved recently and his inky black hair was on the long side, tied back with a leather strap.  It suited him.

He stood as she approached.  Well over six feet tall, he towered over her own five feet, ten inch height.

“Mr. Remaul?” she said holding out her hand.

“Yes.”   His hand engulfed hers.

“I’m Riza Lamrona.”

“Doctor.  How is Tarin?”

“He’ll be fine, but he’s going to have to stay in bed for a week or so before he’s ready to travel.  I want to make sure the bones start to mend properly.  Can you arrange that?”

“Of course.  We have rooms at Wardson’s Bedstay.”

She nodded.  “I wish there was a hospital here.  A med-tech unit would be even better but….”

“I guess they don’t think they need one.”

“Well, he will heal fine, but it could be so much faster and better.  You’re not from around here, are you?”

“No.  I came from Alerkan a couple of years ago.  And you, where are you from?”

“I’m from many places.  Alerkan is one of them.”  Riza retreated to her work.  She didn’t want to make small talk.  Her secrets were too dangerous.  “Here are some pills to help with the pain.  Have Tarin take them.  Don’t let him try to ‘tough’ it out.  Sarina Wardson is used to my sending her patients to care for.  I’ll check on him in the morning.”

“What time do you want him here?”

“Oh, I’m staying with Sarina myself until I find a place of my own.  I’ll come by before I head to work.”

“Good.”

“Yes.  Um. Well.  It was nice to meet you.”  Riza wasn’t usually tongue-tied but she seemed to be with this man.

“You, too.  Perhaps, since you are staying at Wardson’s, I’ll see you at dinner tonight.”

“Unless I get an emergency call, you can count on it.”

Darick was struck with the seemingly plain woman with the amazing blue eyes.  The little doctor thought she could hide behind her tight braid and glasses.  She was wrong.  There was no hiding her soft brown hair or clear blue eyes.  Eyes so pale a blue you could see the black rim around the iris.  Hair with natural blond and red highlights, so it looked like a flash of fire running through it.

Or her sexy body.  He shouldn’t be interested.  Should let her keep her secrets.  He had secrets of his own, but his past kicked in and suddenly he was the Star Patrol lead detective again, digging into the past of a suspect.

There was something about the doctor that was familiar, but he couldn’t put his finger on it.  Dr. Riza Lamrona was in hiding.  And not doing a very good job at it.  Perhaps at dinner, the picture would become clearer.

*****

Riza took extra care before going down to dinner.  Extra care to make sure she looked as plain as possible.  She pulled her hair back into a tight bun.  Put on zero makeup, leaving her complexion pale with no lip color.

She wore her shirt buttoned to the top, with a short brown jacket and baggy brown pants.  It was nothing like the beautiful soft jewel toned jumpsuits and short, skin tight dresses she wore in her previous life.  These baggy nondescript clothes would never have been worn by Dr. Meriza Lonettala.  But she wasn’t that person anymore.

She went to dinner hoping to see Mr. Remaul and at the same time terrified she would.  If Sarina didn’t made such a fuss when she missed dinner, she might have skipped.  Then again, her curiosity was in high gear.  She didn’t want to miss the opportunity to assuage it.

Darick Remaul was the most attractive man she’d met in years and that was saying something.  He was nothing like the men she’d known on Centauri or Alerkan and he was as different as night and day to those she’d met since coming to Gregara a year ago.

He was strong, manly but not oppressive.  It was clear, at least to her, that he was a protector.  It didn’t really matter.  When his friend was cleared for travel, Darick would be gone and she’d never see him again.

Wardson’s was full.  There were ten rooms so it was small enough that Sarina could run it with only two employees.  A maid and the finest chef in all of Ruciem.

Riza arrived downstairs before the rest of the guests.

“Can I help with anything?” she asked Sarina.

Sarina Wardson had become Riza’s friend, not just her landlady.  Riza was her only long term guest and after nearly a year there, Riza didn’t feel like a guest anymore.  This felt more like home than any place she’d been.  Safer.

There were a couple of new guests tonight.  In addition to Darick, Tarin and herself, guests included a couple traveling through on their way to Sepiwa.  and Santro and Jenala Baltin with their baby Kreston.  It was time for his six month check-up.  Lastly, there were two single men, who said they were miners looking for work.

Darick might be able to help them.  Santro and Jenala elected to keep the Delasa Mine a small operation.  They didn’t want their valley over-run with fortune hunters, trespassers or miners looking for work.  The strike at the mine was kept as quiet as possible, no thanks to Zlaten Vandalar.  Not only did he try to kill Jenala, twice, wounding her both times, but he talked to anyone who would listen and told them anything and everything he knew about the mine.

Fortunately, the only ones he could tell were the other inmates and the jailers on the prison planet, Solara, where he was incarcerated.  Unfortunately for Santro and Jenala, some of those guards believed him and came looking for the mine.  They’d had to post guards of their own at the top of the pass to keep people out of the valley.  Those that got through, ran screaming back home as soon as they ran into Lottie, the snarlot.  She was Jenala’s pet and struck fear into everyone, friend and foe alike.

Lottie was eleven feet of snarling, chirping beast.  Dark brown fur covered her from her pointy, tiny eared, beaked head to her hoofed feet.  She had a whip of a tail covered with hair interspersed with quills.  Get too close and she’d shoot a quill, closer still and she’d snap her tail and take a hand off without having to let loose a single quill.

If her tail wasn’t dangerous enough, her beak was filled with razor sharp teeth that could rip an arm off with one bite.   And to top this all off, the damn thing purred. Very few people knew that a snarlot purrs because very few people cared to make friends with one.  Lottie was an exception.  Snarlots don’t generally make good pets.

Riza still couldn’t get near her.  And the first time she saw Santro and Jenala leave Kreston alone with Lottie, it had scared Riza half to death, but it was the only time she’d heard Lottie purr.  The snarlot doted on little Kreston like he was her own baby.  She’d been ‘parked’ outside Riza’s office while Santro and Jenala unloaded the kalcion bags from her to take to the exchange next door.

The large dinner table they sat at seated twenty, though there weren’t that many tonight.  The miners at the table didn’t know one another.  One was very anxious to find work.  “I have a wife and three children to support.  The last mine I worked at closed down.  If I find work, I can send for them.”

“I’m sorry you’ve had to be separated from your family.  It can’t be easy,” said Riza.

“Thank you.  Hopefully it’s a short separation.”

Riza nodded then turned to the second man.  He was looking, no, staring, at her and she didn’t like it at all.  Uncomfortable, she put her brave face on and started to say something.  He beat her to it.

“What do you do?” he asked of Riza.

“I’m the town doctor.  Actually, I’m the province doctor.”  She said, glad of her disguise.

“No specialty?”

Riza shook her head.  “General medicine.  That’s the only specialty I need out here.”

“Surely there is something you excel at.  Surgery, maybe?”

“There wasn’t much call for surgical specialties when I was in school.  Not with the med-tech units available.”

“So you aren’t from here?”

He knew.  He knew who Riza was.  She’d have to leave again.  Run again.  “No, I’m from Sepiwa originally.”

Darick noticed Riza’s color rise when the second miner started grilling her.  He was not a miner, of that Darick was sure.  He had no calluses on his hands and was too clean.  Real kalcion miners always had a bit of kalcion under their nails.  It was nearly impossible to get out.  He could see it in Santro’s and Jenala’s nails and in those of the other miner at the table, but not in this man’s.  Whether he was law enforcement or private investigator he didn’t know, but he would bet he was a malitin hunter.  Someone had put a malitin on Riza’s head.  The lady doctor was in trouble.  All his instincts went on high alert.

He should stay out of it but he knew he wouldn’t  She tried to hide her fear as well as she hid her beauty–not at all successfully, yet she thought she was doing a great job, with her plain clothes and pulled back hair and glasses.

“You ask a lot of questions, stranger,” said Darick, coming to her rescue.  “How about answering a few?”

The miner narrowed his eyes.  “What do you want to know?”

 *****

Riza went directly from the dining hall to her bedroom.  She packed enough clothes to last a week, including her wheebee fur coat.  It was the softest, warmest thing she owned.  The only remnant of her previous life.  The only necessary item she’d owned.  It would keep her warm in the snow and cold.

She was amazed at how much stuff she’d amassed in such a short time.  From the small things like the earrings from Santro and Jenala, in gratitude for the successful birth of Kreston, to the new wave vision she’d bought just two days ago.  She slid her hand across the top of it.  She’d enjoyed it for the short time she’d owned it.  It was nice to be able to relax in her own room and watch for news on herself.

She’d take the earrings, but the other stuff would be left for Sarina to do with as she wanted.  Maybe her next guests would enjoy it.

She wrote a note to Sarina, thanking her for everything but that her family on Alerkan needed her and she must leave right away.  She left by the back door.

“Going somewhere?” said a deep voice from the shadows.

Riza jumped before she recognized the voice.  “You scared me.  Do you always skulk in the dark waiting for unsuspecting women?”

“No, and you should be scared.  Ragnar Bengat has a 25 million beras malitin on your head.  Why?”

“I don’t know what you are talking about.”

Darick grabbed her by the shoulders forcing her to look at him.  “Do you really think you can escape Bengat without help?  Why is he looking for you?  Were you lovers?”

She pulled away from him.  His touched seared her, as if he’d left actual marks on her skin.  It still radiated through her body.  “No.  We were most certainly not lovers.”

“Then why?  You’re not leaving until you tell me, so you might as well start or we’ll be here all night and I know that isn’t what you want.”

Riza backed away from him.  He followed her, not giving her any distance between them.  She briefly wondered if he felt the attraction that she did.  “It’s really none of your business Mr. Remaul.  Now, if you’d please let me go, I’ll be on my way.”

“I told you doctor.  I know who you are.  I remember seeing you on the wave.  Even under all your baggy clothes and glasses I remember what you looked like.”

“No.  That’s not possible.”

“Not for the average person, no it isn’t.  But I’m not your average person.  My background in law enforcement taught me to look below the surface.  So now,” he backed away a little, giving her some room.  “Do you want to tell me what this is all about?”

Riza held back a sob.  It had been so long since she’d been able to confide in anyone and now was as good a time as any.  With malatin hunters right here, Darick Remaul might be her only hope of escape.  “All right I’ll tell you what you want to know.  It doesn’t matter now.  If you turn me in or the other man does.  Bengat will have what he wants.  Me.”

An Interview with Lynda Scott

Thank you for joining me today, Lynda.  Readers don’t forget to leave a comment with your email address in the comment.  Lynda will be picking a winner from those who leave their email address only

How did you get started writing?

I’m not sure. I started writing stories when I first picked up a pencil. Of course most of those stories featured talking animals, ie dogs or horses.

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

I write Science Fantasy Romance. When I was a child visiting my uncle, I found an Isaac Asimov book, The Foundation and Empire, that just captivated me. There was adventure, science and romance all of which just spoke to my soul. That book gave me the desire to write similar stories and so I have.

Tell us about your current series.

Right now, I’m working with Linda Wisdom on an erotic paranormal series under the subtitle: Great Escapes. This series is an interactive series from Colilolquy where the reader can customize certain factors in the story. This is a bit different for me as an author but it’s so much fun!

What inspired your latest book?

I’m working on a futuristic series that features a symbiotic life form pairing with human beings. The first book, Rider, is actively seeking a home while I work on the second book.

What is your favorite part of writing?

I have two favorite parts: research and character development. I love research and find myself lost for hours at a time finding fascinating tidbits that might or might not end up in the book. Character development, well, that introduces me to a new set of friends. Yes, these characters are my friends. I end up knowing them better than almost anyone in the real world. The neat thing is that, like ‘real’ people, different facets of their personality comes out as the story progresses or situations change. Learning about these characters is just as fascinating as creating the world they live in.

What is your least favorite part of writing?

Mmm, writing the synopsis so you can sell your finished book. I either make it so long, it’s pretty much a mini book or so short the reader just scratches her head and says, huh? I’m not much of a salesperson.

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

Linda Wisdom and I are working on Great Escapes: Summer Solstice for Coliloquy right now. Then we might work on a July 4 or Veteran’s Day  themed Great Escapes.

What is your typical day like?

LOL, it’s pretty boring. Get up, feed the alien kitten, housework-exercise-email, prep posts if any for my blog Star-Crossed Romance, prep any guest posts for myself, review current edits or new material to prepare for the day’s writing, actually WRITE, give alien kitten lunch, WRITE,  feed alien kitten, relax by petting or playing with alien kitten, watch tv while checking email. Prepare for bed, feed alien kitten (she has to have small amounts because she gorges then vomits it back up which is definitely an eeewwww moment we try to avoid. The stuff smells bad going in but even worse coming out!)

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

I try to do guest blogs on a regular basis but haven’t really counted up the amount of time. I like to have giveaways so readers can get introduced to my books which I think works best.

How has your experience with self-publishing been?

I’ve only self-published one book, Altered Destiny, and it’s done almost as well as my Heartstone published by Mundania Press.

Where do you get the ideas for your stories?

Dreams. I have strange and unusual dreams that have spurred ideas and scenes and characters. It’s as if I have a doorway to all the alternate universes I write about and the ideas come pouring out. Yep, I’m a bit odd, lol.

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

Prepare to self-promote as often as you can but first make sure you’ve edited your book so that typos and other assorted errors don’t live on every page. Nothing is as distracting as misspelled or misplaced words or grammar.

Do you have critique partners?

No.

What is your favorite dessert/food?

I’m a simple girl. I like chocolate in any form. Dark chocolate is the best but any chocolate will do.

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

If they totally tick me off, they might end up in a chalk outline on page 12 (I have a coffee cup that says that, lol) but generally most people won’t make an appearance.

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

I have a harder time writing conflict since I’m a peace loving person. But I always try to make it a case of defending the innocent or righting a wrong. That seems to make it a little easier for me.

Was your road to publication fraught with peril or a walk in the park?

I’m not sure if was fraught with peril but it wasn’t a walk in the park either. I’d won or finaled in a number of contests and got some nibbles but it took a while to actually make a sale.

Give us an elevator pitch for your book.

Great Escapes pitch – The heartbroken and lovelorn come to Great Escapes B&B in search of a relaxing getaway, only to embark on a weekend of sexual self-discovery, courtesy of the inn’s resident ghosts, who bring to life each guest’s deepest desires.

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

Right now my office is a disaster. I’ve been trying to clean my files so I have papers stacked and scattered everywhere. Then there are the piles of books. Luckily I firmly believe you can never have too many books…though I seem to be pushing that concept, lol.  I have a south-east exposure but no real view. I like the amount of morning light I get since it energizes me. I sure wouldn’t mind a view of a lake or woods though.

What genres are you drawn to as a reader?

I read what I write – science fiction, fantasy, paranormal. Luckily I also get to review a number of fine books in these genres so it’s win-win for me…and explains the stacks of books mentioned earlier, lol

What do you have planned for the future?

In addition to the futuristic books, I have an End-of-the-World book that I’m seriously thinking about. I’m still fleshing out the story and the hero, who won’t be exactly human, but it’s a story that’s becoming more beguiling to me as it grows.

How far do you plan ahead?

Five minutes?

Do you have any words of inspiration for aspiring authors?

Read, then write. Then read some more. Craft books are fine but books by authors you admire are even better. Re-read them. Study how that author has developed the plot or the characters. Compare a book you liked to one you didn’t care as much for, discover why you didn’t like the one and preferred the other. Then read more books, write some more. Never stop writing. Never stop reading.

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

I’ve been in SFFA, HWA and currently in RWA. I belong to several fine chapters that provide research possibilities to help me create background or worlds.

Do you have any rejection stories to share?

I started writing short fiction and one of the rejections I got actually said – we don’t want our readers to lose their lunch! Now…that really irked me because there was nothing in the story that was gory. Not. One. Thing. There was conflict, there was potential conflict. There were romantic elements. There was no gore. But that magazine publisher went belly up about six months later. I hate to see publishers of any sort go belly up, but that time I did the Happy-Dance-of-Revenge, heheheh.

I’d like to offer one person who leaves a comment WITH their email address a pdf copy of my book, Altered Destiny.  The time limit will be three days from the post date.

Thanks for having me here!

Lynda

 Where to find me on the web:

Website http://www.lyndakscott.com.

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   Heartstone

By Lynda K. Scott

Mundania Press

Science Fantasy Romance

Eric d’Ebrur is out of time. He must fine the legendary Heartstone and fulfill the ancient Gar’Ja bond he shares with the Stonebearer. But when he finds her, he discovers that love can be more dangerous than the Gawan threat. Eric can defeat the mind-controlling Gawan but will it cost him the woman he loves?

After terrifying episodes of hypersensitivity, Keriam Norton thinks she’s losing her mind. When handsome shapeshifter Eric d’Ebrur saves her from the monstrous Gawan, she’s sure of it. But insane or not, she’ll find the Heartstone and, if she’s lucky, a love to last a lifetime.

Available in print and ebook format

Buy Links: Mundania Press (use MP10 at checkout for 10% discount)

http://www.mundania.com/book.php?title=Heartstone

Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Heartstone-Lynda-K-Scott/dp/1606592335/ref=ntt_at_ep_dpt_3

Altered Destiny

By Lynda K Scott

Science Fantasy Romance

Available in ebook formats

Stranded on an alternate Earth, architect and Jill-of-all-trades, Liane Gautier-MacGregor must find her way back to her homeworld before she’s enslaved…or falls in love with a man who is the exact duplicate of her ex-husband.

Devyn MacGregor’s alter ego as the Reiver Lord is the only way he can fight the Qui’arel and their nefarious Bride Bounty, a tax paid with human females…until he meets the oddly familiar woman who claims he is her husband. And who sets in motion the rebellion that will either free his countrymen or destroy them.

Buy Links:

Amazon http://www.amazon.com/Altered-Destiny-ebook/dp/B00579FKFO/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1308920443&sr=8-1

Nook http://search.barnesandnoble.com/Altered-Destiny/Lynda-K-Scott/e/2940012882417

Great Escapes – Valentine’s Day

By Lynda K. Scott and Linda Wisdom

Coliloquy

Interactive Adult Paranormal Fiction

The heartbroken and lovelorn come to Great Escapes B&B in search of a relaxing getaway, only to embark on a weekend of sexual self-discovery, courtesy of the inn’s resident ghosts, who bring to life each guest’s deepest desires.

Just as the ghosts transform to meet the needs of each guest, Great Escapes leverages the Kindle platform to deliver what each reader wants. Do you like your erotica steamy or romantic? Your hero to have blue or brown eyes? Anonymously fill out your preferences, and we’ll deliver the best version of hundreds of combinations prepared by the authors.

In Great Escapes: Valentine’s Day, Rose’s best friend gives her a weekend stay, where an invisible lover helps her to rediscover her sexuality. But will she open her eyes enough to see who is right next door?

Buy Link