Sunday, March 07, 2010
Interview with Author Caitlin Crews Plus Contest
Pure Princess, Bartered Bride
Pure Princess, Bartered Bride is the first Harlequin Presents by Caitlin Crews--which debuted on the USA Today Bestseller List!
About the book
Bartered, betrothed and bedded!
As quiet and dangerous as a jungle cat, achieving the impossible is one of Luc Garnier’s defining characteristics.

Princess Gabrielle is invaluable – a pearl beyond price. Yet Luc has defied the odds, and a contract for marriage is drawn up. This will be a union on paper first, and of flesh later. . .
Except Gabrielle is just the same in private as in public – well-bred, well-behaved, and a credit to her country. Luc is determined to find the wanton within and leave his pure princess in total disarray!
Praise for Pure Princess, Bartered Bride
"Debut novelist Caitlin Crews has penned a winner with her first novel for Harlequin Presents: Pure Princess, Bartered Bride! Sexy, intensely emotional and wholly absorbing, this beguiling marriage of convenience story features a deliciously Alpha hero and an smart and independent heroine readers cannot help but admire." --CataRomance
"I will definitely buy any book that she writes."--Adventures of a Gotham Gal
5 of 5 Stars: "This book has the right ingredients for a very good, entertaining Harlequin Presents." --Danielle’s Book Thoughts
"Caitlin Crews has written a brilliant royal romance, a roller coaster romance with extremely intense emotions oozing from both Luc and Gabrielle."--Marilyn’s Romance Reviews
About Caitlin:
USA Today bestselling author Caitlin Crews discovered her first romance novel at the age of twelve, in a bargain bin at the local five and dime. It involved swashbuckling pirates, grand adventures, a heroine with rustling skirts and a mind of her own, and a seriously mouthwatering and masterful hero. The book (the title of which remains lost in the mists of time) made a serious impression. Caitlin was immediately smitten with romances and romance heroes, to the detriment of her middle school social life. And so began her life-long affair with romance novels, many of which she insists on keeping near her at all times, thus creating a fire hazard of love wherever she lives.She currently lives in California with her animator/comic book artist husband and their menagerie of ridiculous animals.
Caitlin Crews is the alter-ego of critically acclaimed author Megan Crane. You can find Caitlin at her website: http://www.caitlincrews.com
On Facebook, on Twitter and at her journal
You can buy the book at Amazon and read an excerpt
The Interview
1. Tell me a little bit about the book Bartered, Betrothed and Bedded!
As quiet and dangerous as a jungle cat, achieving the impossible is one of Luc Garnier’s defining characteristics.
Princess Gabrielle is invaluable -- a pearl beyond price. Yet Luc has defied the odds, and a contract for marriage is drawn up. This will be a union on paper first, and of flesh later. . .
Except Gabrielle is just the same in private as in public -- well-bred, well-behaved, and a credit to her country. Luc is determined to find the wanton within and leave his pure princess in total disarray!
2. If your protagonist were to wake up one day with a super power, what would that super power be? Alternatively (or both!) if your protagonist were to wake up one day with an intense craving for something, what would the craving be?
I think my heroine's craving is for freedom. She thinks her marriage to Luc means the end of that dream, but really, it's the first step towards a different, stronger kind of freedom.
3. Would your villain (or antagonist) prefer to be Emperor Ming The Merciless or Darth Vader? Why?
The villain is a paparazzo. I honestly can't imagine anything nastier or more vile than that.
4. What do you consider the heart of your story? That is, what is the issue or emotion that propels things forward? Spill your guts on this one.
The heart of the book is the question of whether or not love--which feels so irrational and impossible--can be trusted, especially when it leads us to unexpected places. And it's also about how terribly afraid we all are of being wrong about that.
5. If you were in charge of casting the movie adaptation of your book, who gets the call?
Oh... I don't think there's anyone hot enough to play Luc. He's too elemental. However, I once described a Presents novel as what happens when an ordinary girl starts dating King Leonidas from the movie 300. I certainly found Gerard Butler in that role inspirational while I was writing this book. As for Princess Gabrielle, maybe a latter day Grace Kelly. She is pretty much perfect.
6. Is there a scene you cut from the book that you kind of wish you could put back in?
I edit as I go, so there are very rarely whole cut scenes. Just iterations of the same scene.
7. Do you have a sample chapter posted?
I believe you can read through the book on eHarlequin
8. Tell us why your editor is the best editor ever in the universe.
Because she is magical AND a superhero! Seriously. Her edits make everything I write so, so much better. And she once received a manuscript I'd submitted in the morning and returned it, with edits, in under 24 hours. How is that even possible? And her edits were fantastic and right on, as always.
The Contest
To win a copy of this awesome story, leave a comment in which you talk about what you would do if you found yourself dating King Leonidas.
If you don't leave me a way to contact you, then commit to checking back here on the ides of March (that would be March 15) or so, to see if you're the winner. Void where prohibited etc.
posted by Carolyn @ 3/07/2010 06:06:00 PM Permalink![]()
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Saturday, February 13, 2010
Carolyn Gets you the Low Down on HelenKay Dimon
Today, author HelenKay Dimon answers a lot of tough, hard-hitting questions from yours truly. At the end of it all, she has a book to give away!Read on about HelenKay, secret government agencies, writing tips and tattooed chefs and then read about how you might be win her book, Holding Out For A Hero. This is a Kensington Brava (meaning it's hot!).
The Interview
1. Write What you Know. That's one of the first rules of successful fiction writing.
Who knew so many authors are vampires, werewolves or demons? Anyway, in looking over your upcoming releases, I'm now curious about how long you've been on the run from the law. (Under the Gun) Also, I notice there's a helicopter on the cover. Awesome. How long have you been flying those things?
When I have some free time in the evenings, I like to grab my gun, head out to the airport and fly a helicopter along the San Diego coastline. The military and FAA don't really like this since they use the same air space and all, but that's why I take the gun. Helicopter versus fighter plane - I win every single time. Just those few hours of flying and shooting and all is well in my world.
And did you really not suspect that some of our author brethren were creatures of the night,or at least aliens? That is the only explanation I can find for...well, never mind.
Exactly. It explains one heck of a lot. Like why writers' conferences are so much fun and why agents and editors have to work late at night so often. (It's the only time they can talk with certain of their clients/authors.)
2. I understand you're a lawyer. Tell me about how being a lawyer prepared you for a career in writing. I have read more than my share of legal briefs and it's been my impression that legal writing is pretty much the opposite of gripping fiction, except for maybe in the facts section if you happen to have an interesting case.
When did the writing bug bite? Did you sit in contracts class doodling story ideas or were you outlining novels instead of your Motion to Dismiss? Or were you too busy running a secret government agency? (It's okay if you're not comfortable talking about your time under cover. Just leave some blanks and I'll fill them in later.)
I think of myself as a recovering lawyer. It's a 12 Step program that begins with getting out and ends with learning not to argue with everyone about everything. Have not conquered that last part yet. That innate need to take the other side of every argument has not subsided yet. Maybe some day.
I have to admit something here....I was one of those. You know the ones. The people who read all the time but don't read romance. I actually wrote and read Motions and thought they were interesting. Yeah, it's sick. Then my life changed. I started litigating contested custody cases. Try to think of something less romantic. I dare you. The work was tough. Watching people rip their kids apart and fight over floral print curtains was hard to take some days.
One day a retiring attorney handed me three romances-- Perfect Partners by Jayne Ann Krentz, The Bride by Julie Garwood and Daniel's Bride by Linda Lael Miller -- and read them and fell in love. I thought the writing was smart and sexy. I realized I'd been missing something. Something pretty great. So, I started reading a lot of romance. About two years later, fueled by an overinflated ego that is just sooooo attractive, I decided I could write one.
Didn't know a thing about fiction writing, but off I went. After a few years of floundering and writing mostly for myself, I decided to go from hobby to potential career. I entered and finaled in Lori Foster's Brava Novella Contest and 18 months later sold to Kensington.
I can honestly say reading romance changed my life. Right now I'd be sitting in a courtroom trying to decide which parent should have the kids on Memorial Day if my world hadn't gone careening wildly off track and into the romance world. I thank Jayne Ann Krentz, Julie Garwood and Linda Lael Miller every single day for that fact I wear sweats instead of pantyhose to work now.
For the record, I don't run a secret government agency but I think the world would be better if I did. Do you know who I can talk to about that?
NB: HelenKay is fibbing. Anyone who flies helicopters and shoots it out with fighter jets is OBVIOUSLY the former head of a secret government agency. I mean, come on. Doh.
Interview Interruptus
Check this out. Is she running secret agency or what? Do you see the office she's sitting in? Does that not say covert agency all over it?
The Interview continues . . .
3. When I interview other authors, I like to get as much writing advice as I can from them. I recently read your book Right Here, Right Now, and I thought the dialogue was exceptionally deft and amusing. As someone who is humor impaired in my fiction, I'm looking for tips on writing humor. If you could also address great dialogue too, that would be helpful (Thanks!)
Did you really read it or are you just saying that to make me like you more? 'Cause it worked I like you even more now.
Yes, I did read it. I'm glad you like me even more. I like you, too, HelenKay. FYI, we don't lie here on my blog. Well, hardly ever. But I'm not lying about your book. Anyway, could we talk a little about dialogue and humor?
But, really, did you read it?? What happens on page 45? And don't give me that "I downloaded the book and my page numbers don't match with the book's" stuff. Not buying it!
Um. Well. Gosh. Oddly enough, I DID read your book on my iPhone. The pages actually don't match the physical copy. I can prove it:

See? Now. About dialogue and humor?
Okay. Good.
That's not about dialogue. Or humor. This is a professional, serious interview here. Plus I need some advice about dialogue and humor.
Back to your question... I love writing dialogue. It's my favorite part. When I write, I actually let the dialogue play in my head (which sounds a little nutty, now that I see that in writing) and put it down on paper as it comes to me. No dialogue tags. No narrative. Just a stream of talk between the characters in the scene, letting it come out in banter and a Moonlighting (am I showing my age?) way. I then build the scene around that back and forth. I end up trimming the dialogue down to avoid a situation where it's obvious I love hearing myself talk and then I layer in the rest.
On humor? I will relay a conversation my hubby and I have just about every week:
Me: I'm funny. Most people aren't funny, so you're lucky to be with me.
Hubby (deadpan): Uh-huh. You're hysterical.
Clearly, he does not appreciate just how funny I am.
Wow. Words fail me.
I'm not sure that my dialogue ever strikes me as funny when I write it. People tell me it's funny, which is fabulous, because I love funny. But, really, I think humor is either a part of your voice or not. If you try to be funny --force it --it comes off as obvious and, well, not funny. I do think it's easier to aim for amusing. We all have amusing things happen to us, stuff that makes us smile. Those relatable pieces of life amuse people and add that bit of lightness to a story.
4. I'm curious about how you managed to have two books out in the same month. Are you just an insanely fast writer?
My publishers hate me. See, those books were supposed to come out in different months. Then, each publisher shifted each book by a month and - viola - two releases. This is somewhat better than October 2009 when I had three releases...all from the same publisher. I cried a lot and worried about the?end of my career during October 2009.
But on the fast thing? I do write fairly fast but only after the book is in my head. I have to start thinking about it all the time, seeing the scenes flash by (again, sounds nutty), before I can get it down on paper in anything other than crap form.
About The Books- Plus the Interview Continues . . .
5. Can you tell me a couple of things about Under the Gun and Leave Me Breathless that aren't in the cover blurb (since those will be posted here for everyone to read and admire.) Is there a spicy or exciting scene or two you can tease us with?
My favorite part of Under The Gun isn't in the cover blurb. See, these folks were once engaged. Our lovely heroine Claire, dumped handsome hero Luke before the wedding and Claire is now accused of killing the guy she married instead of our fine hero. How's that for some added conflict? If that wasn't bad enough, I injured poor Luke in the first scene and keep the guy in pain for the entire book. Mean author.
I'm kind of scared of you now.
Here's a little taste:
The second they were alone Luke pinned Claire with the same green-eyed gaze that used to make her forget what she was saying from one thought to another.
"If you even try move out of this room I'll stop you," he said.
"You only have one good arm."
"I can do a lot with just that one."
Which was exactly why she hadn't yet made a run for the door. "I'm not leaving."
"That's not my experience," he mumbled under his breath.
Adam stalked back into the room and dumped a small box on the table, along with gauze, some medicine, a knife and a bottle. "What are we looking at in terms of injuries here?"
Luke tried to lift his arm but groaned instead. "It's a through and through. Not serious. Just bloody and stings like a son of a bitch."
She eyed up the whiskey. "Which is cause for a celebratory drink?"
Both men stared at her but only Luke answered. "I'm going to use it to clean the wound."
She noticed his husky voice had cleared and his swaying had stopped. Still... "Shouldn't you be at a hospital? I mean, how bad is this?"
Luke picked up a bandage packet and put the edge between his teeth and ripped it open. "It's a gunshot, so it doesn't feel good. But, unfortunately for you, I'm not going to die."
She forgot how dizzying his stubbornness could be. "You are if you don't stop with the attitude."
He peeked up at her through his mop of hair. "I'd like to remind you how I got shot."
That was an easy one. He refused to stick with the mental plan she had worked out for him. He might hate her but his rescue tendencies hadn't dulled.
ooh. I like.
Order Under the Gun
About Leave me Breathless
Leave Me Breathless is sexier and a bit less suspense oriented. Ben is a young superstar judge. Callie is his unwanted bodyguard and is completely unimpressed with Ben's impressive record. Loved making the heroine the tough one and the hero the one who insisted he didn't need help.
PERMISSION TO APPROACH
According to Judge Bennett Walker, trying to kill him is a dumb idea. They might make him wear a big black nightgown to work, but it covers a lot of muscles, and he’s definitely packing beneath it. He’s also an ex-prosecutor and an ex-GI Joe. So when his brother brings in Callie Robbins to protect him, Ben has a few issues. First, he doesn't need a bodyguard. Second, she’s a 130-pound girl—more smoking hot than smoking gun. And third, what if his body wants her guarding the night shift?
Callie has no problem brushing aside Ben’s disbelief. She left the FBI to escape the boys’ club, but she can be deeper undercover and twice as lethal as any beefy John Doe. As for whether someone’s after Bennett or not, the death threats and car bombs look pretty convincing to Callie. Of course, she might get distracted, sitting inches from the sexiest judge in DC for ten hours a day. Keeping him safe is no picnic. Keeping it professional—that might be impossible.
Here's a brief scene from early in their relationship
Something clicked in Ben's head. "Wait, how do you know about the email?"
Callie bit her bottom lip but stayed quiet.
That couldn't be a good sign. "You were on my computer?" He knew the answer but wanted her to own up to the misdemeanor. Maybe apologize.
"I was checking for email threats." She scribbled down something on the lined paper. "Get used to it."
She sure didn't sound sorry to him. "You were violating my privacy."
"We can call it whatever you want."
"How about illegal? I could have you arrested."
She snorted. "Oh, please."
It was hard to threaten someone who refused to be afraid. "Which reminds me, how did you get in the office this morning?
She reached inside her blazer pocket and flashed a courthouse I.D. badge at him. "I also have a key to the suite and my own desk."
He followed her head nod to the small set-up perpendicular from his under the window. How in the hell had he missed that? "I don’t think so."
"You don't get a vote."
She needed to understand how this arrangement was going to work. Her pushy demanding act was not the right answer. "The governor who appointed me and the electorate that keeps me here would disagree."
She rolled her eyes. Made quite the dramatic scene of it, too. "Must you talk like that?"
"Like what?"
"All hoity and superior."
He tried to remember the last time someone fought him this hard and showed so little respect for his position. He came up with an answer fast: never. "Was it the word 'electorate' that upset you?"
She threw her notebook on his desk. "To be honest, most everything you say annoys me."
He was starting to see why she no longer had a job with the FBI. That mouth could not have been an asset in a rule-oriented, follow-the-chain-of-command government agency. "Right back at you, sweetheart."
Oooh. I like this too!
order Leave me Breathless
Carolyn Asks HelenKay a REALLY hard Question
Which of these two scenarios would you prefer? Explain your choice.
A. You're walking down the street on a nice day when a pastry chef runs out of the bakery you're passing and practically mows you down. To apologize, he gives you his pastry chef hat which you wear that afternoon when you're settling in for an afternoon of baking goodies for yours truly. The hat, you discover, confers the ability to make baked goods better than anyone in the world but only if you bake for good, not evil.
B. You're walking down the street on a nice day when a tattoo artist runs out of his tattoo parlor and practically mows you down. To apologize, he gives you a free tattoo (location your choice). One week later, you discover that your new tat confers on you the ability to understand the directions for any product that says "Some assembly required" on the box.
Is there an option for a hot pastry chef with a tattoo? Of those two, I'd pick the hat because I can't cook. If it doesn't come frozen and in a box, I can't make it. Needless to say, my hubby does all of the cooking in our house, which is a good thing because we'd starve otherwise. But the idea of being able to make all the cookies and cakes and cinnamon buns I want is just awesome. I could cook and then eat my way out of the room. I might fantasize about that for the rest of the week. Thanks for putting that in my head.
I can't believe I didn't think of a hot pastry chef with a tattoo! My God, that's brilliant. He should have a tat of an apple pie on his butt.
Thank you so much for hosting me here!
You're welcome! Thanks for stopping by.
How To Possibly Win HelenKay's Book
Answer one or more of the following questions in the comments:
- Suppose the Tattooed Chef DOES NOT have a tattoo of apple pie. But there is a tattoo. What's the next best tat for a hot pastry chef?
- What's your favorite pastry?
- Where do you prefer to eat your favorite pastry?
Go!
Labels: Authors, AuthorTalk, contest, Interview
posted by Carolyn @ 2/13/2010 06:36:00 PM Permalink![]()
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Sunday, January 31, 2010
Interview with Judi Fennel -- Plus a Contest!
About The Author
Judi Fennell has had her nose in a book and her head in some celestial realm all her life, including those early years when her mom would exhort her to "get outside!" instead of watching Bewitched or I Dream of Jeannie on television. So she did--right into Dad's hammock with her Nancy Drew books.These days she's more likely to have her nose in her laptop and her head (and the rest of her body) at her favorite bookstore, but she's still reading, whether it be her latest manuscript or friends' books.
A three-time finalist in online contests, Judi has enjoyed the reader feedback she's received and would love to hear what you think about her Mer series. Check out her website at www.JudiFennell.com for excerpts, reviews and fun pictures from reader and writer conferences, and the chance to "dive in" to her stories.
About the Book
She's on a mission to save the planet. . .

Mermaid Angel Tritone has been researching humans from afar, hoping to find a way to convince them to stop polluting. When she jumps into a boat to escape a shark attack, it's her chance to pursue her mission, but she has to keep her identity a total secret. . .
When he finds out what she really is, they're both in mortal danger. . .
For Logan Hardington, finding a beautiful woman on his boat is surely not a problem-- until he discovers she's a mermaid, and suddenly his life is on the line. . .
What people are saying
Fennell's got detailed worldbuilding, creative secondary characters and an impressive use of mythology in this great read. While this title is part of a series, it works well as a stand-alone. Angel and Logan are both incredibly textured characters.
RT BookReview Magazine 4 Stars
Judi Fennell has extraordinary imagination and has certainly used it in creating this exciting and colorful story. Her characters are wonderful.
Fresh Fiction
The best blend of both worlds. I... love each and every character in Catch of A Lifetime (and) found (it) well worth diving into.
Long And Short Reviews 4.5 Books
4 Stars!
Affair de Coeur Magazine
Catch of a Lifetime is a heart warming tale. Ms. Fennell Ms. Fennell has created a delightful world that, I have enjoyed escaping to. It is both dangerous and fun.
Anna's Book Blog
The Interview
1. If your protagonist were to wake up one day with a super power, what would that super power be?
Angel actually wouldn't care whether she had one or not. She can change her tail to legs and back again, so she's pretty happy. Maybe if she could extend that change from two days to six months, that might do it. But she's a scientist; she prefers facts and evidence to magic.
2. If your protagonist were to wake up one day with an intense craving for something, what would the craving be?
Ice cream. Peppermint. Frozen iceberg chips just don't have the same flavor.
3. Would your villain (or antagonist) prefer to be Emperor Ming The Merciless or Darth Vader? Why?
Darth - Ming ruled a planet. Darth has a bigger focus; he wants every universe out there. Ceto has a bone to pick with The Gods and she wouldn't mind having more power than them. As for the sharks, they'd just be happy to have a say in what happens on The Council. Actually, that's not true. I could see A.C. using that as a stepping stone to the throne. Maybe even Poseidon's trident.
4. What do you consider the heart of your story? That is, what is the issue or emotion that propels things forward? Spill your guts on this one.
Angel wanting to be someone. I hadn't seen that coming when I wrote her story. All of a sudden, she's thinking about how much she wants to be so much more than "Just Angel." I hadn't realized. I love when things like that happen when I'm writing a story. All along, she's known why she's pushing so hard for the job she's after, but I hadn't realized why until that moment. It makes writing magical.
5. If you were in charge of casting the movie adaptation of your book, who gets the call?
I always love this question because while I can pick actors/actresses for my characters, I have a hard time seeing them as the characters because the characters are such vivid personalities in their own right. But, by all means, let Hollywood come calling! For Angel, I see Jessica Alba, and for Logan, Hugh Jackman. I have yet to see a Michael anywhere, though. And I'd pull Susan Sarandon in for Ceto, and either Pacino or DeNiro for A.C. Hell, this is a "what if" so let's get both. There are enough thug hammerheads to go around Hollywood mafiosos. Ray Liotta, too.
6. Is there a scene you cut from the book that you kind of wish you could put back in?
The first five chapters. :) Yep, I wrote five chapters before the opening of the book. They showed Angel escaping Hammerhead Harry, and what happens when she shows up on the boat and Michael sees her. But I think the book is stronger written the way it was published. Those five chapters, however, make good "freebies" on my website and will go up over the next few weeks.
7. Do you have a sample chapter posted?
I have an excerpt on my website.
8. Tell us why your editor is the best editor ever in the universe.
Because she loves my stories enough to buy them! And my next series, too. And hopefully more after that. Seriously, though, Deb Werksman is amazing. She knows just how to get to the heart of the story and build it outward from there. She can see things that need clarification and convey them wonderfully. Not that I like having to do those kinds of revisions, but all of my books are stronger because of the role she plays.
Contest
To celebrate the release of each of her books, Judi Fennell and the Atlantis Inn and the Hibiscus House bed and breakfasts are raffling off three romantic beach getaway weekends. All information is on Judi's website, www.JudiFennell.com.
Labels: Authors, contest, Interview
posted by Carolyn @ 1/31/2010 10:47:00 AM Permalink![]()
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Tuesday, November 17, 2009
Interview with Melissa Senate
About Melissa Senate
Melissa Senate lives on the coast of Maine with her son and their menagerie of pets. She’s the author of eight novels (seven women’s fiction and one young adult) with two on the way. Visit her website melissasenate.com for more information and she’d love if you became her friend Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/MelissaSenate) and followed her on Twitter (http://twitter.com/melissasenate). About the Book
The Secret of Joy by Melissa Senate
(Pub Date: 11/17, Simon & Schuster's Downtown Press imprint, $15.00 trade paperback)
Introducing THE SECRET OF JOY (Simon & Schuster trade paperback, $15.00) by Melissa Senate, the "warm, winning" new novel from the bestselling author of See Jane Date and Love You To Death.
Buy the Book from Amazon
The Secret of Joy is a Simon & Schuster Book Club Pick! For more information, check out the
Reading Group Guide:
Praise:
The Secret of Joy by Melissa Senate opened my heart, made me laugh, cry, and smile all at the same time. A don't-miss read! -- New York Times bestselling author Carly Phillips
The Secret of Joy is a warm hug of a book. Insightful, wise, and romantic, it's as inviting as the small-town life it depicts. -- Claire LaZebnik
A wonderfully heartfelt story about hope, possibilities and the yearning for real connections. Senate's latest will take you on a much needed vacation, while sneaking vital life lessons in when you're not looking. --Caprice Crane
The Interview
1. Tell us about your latest release and the inspiration behind it.
A: 28-year-old New Yorker Rebecca Strand is shocked when her dying father confesses a devastating secret: he had affair when Rebecca was a toddler- and a baby he turned his back on at birth. Now, his wish is that the daughter he abandoned, Joy Joyhawk, read the unsent letters he wrote to her every year on her birthday. Determined to fulfill her father's wish, Rebecca drives to a small town in Maine-- against the advice of her lawyer boyfriend who's sure Joy will be a "disappointing, trashy opportunist" and demand half her father's fortune. But when hopeful Rebecca knocks on her half-sister's door, Joy-- a separated mother who conducts weekend singles tours out of her orange mini-bus-- wants nothing to do with Rebecca or the letters her father wrote to her. Determined to forge some kind of relationship with Joy, Rebecca sticks around, finding unexpected support from Joy's best clients-- the Divorced Ladies Club of Wiscasset-- and a sexy carpenter named Theo . . . .
The inspiration: Several years ago, I received an email out of the blue that said: I think you might be my half-sister. I was. Am. It took me a long time to decide to take that little (huge) nugget and write a novel to help me figure out the answer to some burning questions, such as: if you haven't seen or heard from your biological father, or any member of his family, since you were little (or, in Joy's case, never at all), is his child from another relationship really your sibling? Or just a stranger? Does the word father or sister or brother mean anything without back up? I had a ton of questions and set out to uncover how I felt through a fictional character, but it's interesting to me that I flipped everything on its head in the writing of the story. Nothing but the basic questions that are proposed in the novel are autobiographical. Just the questions! And I surprised myself quite a few times during the writing of this story with how I felt about certain things. Amazing how writing fiction can teach you so much about yourself.
2. Who do you picture in your mind when you write?:
A: Sometimes I picture a lone woman reading my book on a bus or on her sofa or in a coffee shop, and I imagine what she's responding to, relating to, thinking about as she reads. Would this scene make her smile? Would she relate? But most of the time, I picture my characters' faces with their personalities etched into their features. I rarely base my characters physically on celebs (except for my first book—Jane from See Jane Date looked just like Ann Marie from "That Girl" (a young Marlo Thomas). She did not look like Charisma Carpenter, who perfectly played her in the TV movie, but now when I think of Jane, I think of Charisma only. Which makes me think of hot David Boreanaz, which is a good thing.
3. What was the inspiration for your hero? An actor, a picture you saw, some random guy in the coffee shop?:
A: I have long been drawn to guys with dark eyes and dark hair, starting with my very first serious crush in 7th grade. But Theo, Rebecca's love interest, has sandy-blond hair and pale brown eyes because that's just the way he came out of the keyboard-- he sort of created himself. I never base the guys on anyone. They're always inspired by the guy I wish I were dating. (Yes, I'm single!) Right now, as a single mother, I'd love a guy who, like hot, wise Theo, works with his hands and made things, like porch swings and tree houses for my son. A guy who's smart and honest and romantic and always seems to say the right thing at the right time. Oh and hot, too.
4. Writing a letter can be daunting. How do you even begin the process of writing a novel? Does it start with a title? A character? A plot? All or none of the above?
A: An idea flits into my heart, mind and soul (if I may be so dramatic!) and I just know. The idea, just a wispy thing, grips me and I think about it until the two major characters-- my protagonist and the person or thing who "forces" her change—become clear. Then I write out a one page treatment, a bare bones synopsis, then think about that, then revise the storyline into a "pitch" I can share with my agent. If she green-lights it, I'll then let myself dream it into a full blown synopsis, which is what I usually sell a novel on. The synopsis, in its major plot points, rarely changes, but how the characters get from page one to page 325 is another story.
5. What's one piece of writing advice you've found valuable on your journey to publication?
A: Trust yourself. Your gut knows. You know.
6. Tell us why your editor is the best editor ever in the universe.
A: I'm crazy about my editor, Jennifer Heddle at Simon & Schuster/Pocket Books. I love working with her. She's just so razor-sharp smart and aware and interested in the world and pop culture (which I've learned via being her friend on Facebook!). Her suggestions, starting with our first conversation before she even bought my book, were so intelligent and thoughtful. And she's New York honest in a very kind way with her editorial letters and edits. I absolutely trust what she says. As I've gotten to know her, I'm even more touched that she bought my book. She's a tough customer, I think. And that's a good thing.
7. Any tried and true tricks for beating procrastination?
A Tried but not true: taking laptop to a library or coffee lounge without wi-fi. I can't handle more than an hour or two without checking email or reading through Twitter or Facebook. Tried and true: a deadline, whether self-given or publisher-given.
8. Which 'craft' book has inspired or helped you the most throughout your writing career?
A: The most inspiring, to me, is Bird by Bird by Anne Lamott. But I also love Stephen King's On Writing; Carolyn See's How To Make A Literary Life, and Elizabeth Berg's Escaping Into The Open.
9. If your book were to be made into a movie, who could you see playing the lead role?:
A: For the main character, Rebecca, I see Rachel McAdams. She has such sweetness and hope in her eyes, and such a lovely face. For half-sister Joy, Kristin Bell, with all that "Veronica Mars" intensity. For delicious Theo, Rebecca's love interest, the very attractive Aaron Eckhart. Love his face.
10. If you could only own and read 5 books for the rest of your life, (excluding your own) what five books would you choose?:
A: The Portable Dorothy Parker; the collected works of William Shakespeare; To Kill A Mockingbird; Anne of Green Gables; The Color Purple; and I can't leave off this gem: Why I Like My Mommy by Max (my son's latest work in first grade!)
11. Writers are usually big readers too. How do you make time for reading and what are you reading at the moment?
A: The moment my seven-year-old son closes those eyes for the night, I stretch out on my little sofa with a good book, hot chocolate (it's getting cooold here in Maine) and my two black cats at my feet. I'm reading Elizabeth Berg's Home Safe right now. I love how she manages to write so honestly and elegantly at the same time. She's able to call someone a shit in the loveliest way. Next up: the seven or so books that came from Amazon, staring with Kristina Riggle's Real Life & Liars. I love women's fiction—all these interesting storylines and gorgeous covers.
12. What's next for you?
A: Next up is my second novel for teens, The Mosts, which will be published by Random House in June 2010. Then, my next women's fiction novel from Simon & Schuster, The Love Goddess's Cooking School, about five people in an Italian cooking class, will be published November 2010. I'm staring down a 1/1 deadline (the worst deadline to have!) And I'm being poked at by a new idea . . . .
posted by Carolyn @ 11/17/2009 06:00:00 AM Permalink![]()
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Tuesday, November 10, 2009
Interview with Author Jessica Brody - Contest, too!

About the Author
Jessica Brody graduated from Smith College in Massachusetts with degrees in economics and French. In 2005, she left her job at MGM Studios in Los Angeles to become a full-time freelance writer and producer. Jessica currently lives in Los Angeles, where she is working on her next novel. Visit Jessica's website at: www.JessicaBrody.com
About LOVE UNDER COVER

In her job, she’s an expert on men. . .
In her own relationship, she doesn’t have a clue.
Boyfriend behaving badly? Suspect your husband of straying? Jennifer Hunter can supply the ultimate test. She runs a company which specializes in conducting fidelity inspections for those who suspect their loved ones are capable of infidelity.
An expert on men, Jennifer can usually tell if they're single, married or lying. . . Unfortunately, her new boyfriend, Jamie, is one of the few men that she's never been able to 'read.' Has she finally found the perfect man or is he too good to be true?
A captivating new novel from the bestselling author of The Fidelity Files.
Available November 10, wherever books are sold.
Praise
Currently in development as a TV series by the executive producer of Crash!
"With a complicated, sympathetic protagonist, worthy stakes and a clever twist on the standard chick lit narrative, Brody will pull readers in from the first page." -- Publisher's Weekly
"Those who enjoyed Brody's debut will be eager to catch up with Jennifer, but newcomers will be intrigued, too...an honest, witty portrayal of modern love." -- Booklist
"With her usual smart, deft, and witty prose, Brody delves deep into the psychology of a woman who tests the fidelity of strangers for a living but struggles with commitment in her own life." -- Joanne Rendell, author of Crossing Washington Square and The Professors' Wives' Club
Trailer:
The Interview
What was your inspiration behind Love Under Cover?
As soon as I finished writing my first novel, The Fidelity Files¸ I knew that Jennifer's journey wasn't over yet. Although she had seemed to find her happy ending there was so much more fun stuff I had in mind for another book. Setting Jennifer up with an entire agency of fidelity inspectors was definitely the first and foremost on my mind for the next instalment.
Plus, I really wanted to explore what a fidelity inspector would be like in a committed relationship. After everything she's seen—all the cheating, dishonesty, and betrayal—would she really be capable of settling down herself? So that's what I set out to focus on in this book.
What is the most memorable first line you've ever read in a novel?
There's a very powerful young adult novel called The Chosen One by Carol Lynch Williams that I read last year. It's about a fifteen year old girl who grew up on a polygamist compound and it opens with this: "If I was going to kill the Prophet," I say, not even keeping my voice low, "I'd do it in Africa." I read that line and didn't put the book down until the end. I knew from that line that it was going to be a heart pounding read. And it was.
Which scene (or scenes) in your novel did you love writing? Why?
I love writing any of the scenes with Jennifer's friends. They're all fun in their own way. Zoë has a terrible road rage problem and she has a habit of talking on the phone while driving so those conversations with Jen and Zoë on the phone are always really entertaining for me. I get to channel my inner turrets patient. Sophie is totally neurotic. I love going over the top with her.
And John is the flamboyant gay boy from West Hollywood who is always quick with his sarcasm and wit. Sometimes I don't know where his remarks come from. I must be channelling my inner gay man because I'll write something that he says and think, "That's really funny. Where the hell did that come from?"
Which 'craft' book has inspired or helped you the most throughout your writing career?
SAVE THE CAT, by Blake Snyder. It changed my life. People tell me my books read like movies. Well, that's probably because SAVE THE CAT is actually a book for screenwriting. But I've found it translates exceptionally well to novels. A well-told story is a well-told story, regardless of the medium and a fast-moving story keeps the pages turning. Blake Snyder lays out a simple (yet effective) step-by-step beat sheet of how to tell any story and I'll never write another book without it! He's very well-respected in the industry and I know many writers (screenwriters and novelists alike) that utilize his books. Plus, the book is extremely funny and entertaining to read!
Since becoming a writer, what's the most glamorous thing you've ever done?
When my first book, The Fidelity Files, came out in France last year, my French publisher actually flew me out to Paris to promote it! It was a dream come true! I speak French almost fluently so I was able to conduct all my interviews in French, which was both nerve wrecking and exciting at the same time. Paris has always held a special place in my heart. I was a French major in college and I lived in Paris my junior abroad. Plus, I spent a month in Paris in 2005 finishing the novel so it was all very magical and kismet to be back there to see it in French book stores!
If you could be a superhero, what would you superpower be?
Calorie Immunity. That would definitely be my super power. The ability to eat anything I want and be completely unaffected by the calories contained within. That would be really awesome. And I guess that would automatically make my nemesis cupcakes. Although, if this were a comic book, he would be called "Dr. Cupcake" and his side kick would be called "Sprinkles."
Do you have a sample chapter posted?
Absolutely! www.jessicabrody.com/loveundercover_excerpt.html
What's the main thing you hope people take away from your book?
Entertainment. That's all I seek to do. Entertain people. The reason I started writing was because of Bridget Jones' Diary by Helen Fielding. I read that book in college whenever I would go to the gym and I remember looking down at the elliptical and thinking, "Seriously? I've already been exercising for thirty minutes!?" The time would FLY by. I was so inspired and awed by the fact that a book could take me away from my life like that. I knew from that day on that I wanted to be a writer so I could attempt to do the same. So if my book can help pass the time of a long flight or a boring workout then I've accomplished my goal. And if some of the issues about relationships and love and trust that I've delved into get people thinking, than that's just icing on the cupcake.
If you could only own and read 5 books for the rest of your life, (excluding your own) what five books would you choose?
The Undomestic Goddess by Sophie Kinsella to make me laugh.
My Sister's Keeper by Jodi Picoult to make me cry.
The Time Traveler's Wife by Audrey Niffenegger to make me believe in fantastical love.
Twilight by Stephenie Meyer to give me a hot vampire to fantasize about daily.
Bridget Jones' Diary by Helen Fielding to remind me of why I write.
What's next for you?
Although I strive to live in the moment, I can't help but be excited about the future! I've got three young adult books scheduled to come out in the next three years from Farrar, Straus, & Giroux. The first, THE KARMA CLUB, releases on April 27 and I simply can't wait! It's about three teen girls who are tired of waiting for Karma to get off its butt and do its job, so they decide to give Karma a helping hand by getting revenge on their evil ex-boyfriends. But they soon discover that when you mess with Karma, Karma messes back. It's a story I wanted to tell for years and I'm so glad it's finally going to be put out to the world. The teen voice feels very natural to me (not sure what that says about my inherent maturity level, but whatever!) and the YA novels are such a blast to write. I think the teenage years resonate with everyone in some way. For me, my teen years were very painful so it's somewhat therapeutic to be able to "go back" and relive them with all the knowledge and wisdom that I have now!
I've never been able to choose just one favorite food, but do you have a clear preference?
People tell me I have an obsessive personality. Meaning, I get hooked on one thing and stick with it for weeks, months, sometimes years and do nothing else. It's very much apparent when it comes to my food. When I find something I like, I'll eat it every day for months until I get sick of it and eventually replace it with something else. Right now, it's Sushi Sunday and Nacho Monday. My boyfriend and I order sushi delivery every Sunday night and we go out to our favorite Mexican restaurant for Nachos every Monday. And now I actually look forward to Mondays!
What's one piece of writing advice you've found valuable on your journey to publication?
Jump and the net will appear. Although I think this applies to any career you're trying to get into. You have to jump in with both feet. Right into the deep end. You can't wait for the perfect opportunity to come along, you just have to go for it. When I decided I would be a published author, I made the decision and I leapt off the cliff…without a parachute. I quit my high-paying, corporate job at a move studio, started taking odd jobs off of Craigslist to make ends meet, downgraded my car, my apartment and my lifestyle to save money and just went for it. I never looked back. I turned down three job offers from other studios, all which paid even more than I was making when I left my previous one. I sold my first novel a year and a half after I quit. Now I write full time and this year, for the first time since I quit my corporate job in 2005, I'm making more as a writer than I was making as a "suit." Do what you love and the money will eventually come. I'm a big believer in this. And I am living proof that it works!
What do you think readers might be surprised to know about you?
I'm a total techno junkie. I love technology and gadgets. iPods, digital cameras, computers, Tivos, Sling Boxes. . . those are my weaknesses. My toys. I would die without my blackberry and my Kindle. Unlike most women, I hate shopping for clothes and shoes. To me it feels like a huge waste of time. In a perfect world, I would just wear my sweat pants and Ugg knock-offs all day, every day (okay, maybe I already do that), but set me loose in a Fry's Electronics or a Best Buy and you probably won't see me for a week.
Which fictional character would you most like to have dinner with?
Um, Edward Cullen, of course! Although after dinner, I'd probably ask him to stick around for a drink, a movie, coffee, and then who knows where it might lead. I'm not to be held responsible (or accountable) for fictional dinner dates with hot vampires.
What is your favorite word?
Hmm. . . that's a tough one. I don't know if I have just one favorite word, I like so very many of them, but I definitely have a least favorite word and that's "panties." God, I hate that word! I cringe just writing it here!
Why do you write?
I once heard someone say, "Dancers dance because they have to." I really loved that and I think it's the same for writers. I definitely have to write. Like I have to breathe. If I don't, I get very stir crazy. All of that energy has to come out somehow and for me, it comes out in words. Lots and lots of words. Some of them are actually worth publishing.
The Contest
You could win a copy of Jessica's Love Under Cover. Here's how. Leave a comment by Friday November 13 in which you mention the superstition you just can't get over. Or say something about Friday the 13th. Do you love it or not? If you don't leave me a way to email you if you win, then commit to checking back here over the weekend to see if you're the winner.
Go forth and comment.
posted by Carolyn @ 11/10/2009 06:00:00 AM Permalink![]()
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Monday, November 02, 2009
Interview with Nalini Singh Plus a Contest!!

I'm totally Psyched to have New York Times Bestselling author Nalini Singh visiting my blog today. Yay!!!! She has a brand new book out and I'm pimping her right here. That's right. Nalini Singh. Right here at my blog! squeeeeeee! Plus, there's a contest. You could win a free book. Read through to the end of the post to see what you need to do.
And, if you happen to subscribe to my newsletter, one of you will win a book, too! Because I'm awesome that way, and so is Nalini. Need proof? Read on.
Carolyn Poses Important Questions to Nalini
Carolyn: Eric Northman or Vampire Bill?
Nalini: I think Eric. Or maybe Bill. Eric. Bill. Do I have to choose???
Yes. You have to chose. I'll put you down in the Eric column.
Carolyn: You're walking along the forest path when an amazingly hot elf blocks your way. (Assume he closely resembles Orlando Bloom after a 16 week workout regimen rigorously observed.) After you admire his impressive sword with jeweled hilt, he offers you one of two gifts, your choice. Which do you choose, the Elixir of Immortality or fluency in any language?
Nalini: On the face of it, this one is a no brainer - the Elixir, of course, because if you have a millennium or two, learning languages isn't going to be a problem.
However, I'm not sure I'd like to live forever - especially if it was only me who was changed. Can you imagine what it would be like to watch everyone around you grow old while you remained forever young? It would be different if those I loved were also given the chance to be immortal. (The gift and price of immortality is actually something I've considered a lot, as it's one of the threads in my Guild Hunter series.)
You raise some good points. Plus, what if the Elixir didn't confer eternal youth? Elves can be tricky that way.
Carolyn: Which creeps you out more? Spiders hanging from the ceiling (right over your bed) or eyes that glow in the dark (in your closet)?
Nalini: The spiders, hands down! (Have you seen The Grudge? That scene where all that hair is hanging down from the ceiling? Creeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeepy!)
I spend many nights staring at my closet.
Carolyn: Dark chocolate or milk?
Nalini: Chocolate in any form is a winner for me.
Glad to hear it, Nalini. It's important to be open minded and flexible about these things.
Carolyn: For the purposes of this question, assume these two items are equal in value. I know you wouldn't want to be cheap. You're shopping someplace exclusive with someone else's bucket o' cash. What do you get me? Diamond earrings (highest quality and exquisitely cut and set) or a brand new top of the line Jag (insurance pre-paid for life of car)
Nalini: Well, if it's someone else's (endless) bucket o' cash, why not both? *g* But if I had to choose, I think I'd go for the diamonds - you could wear and enjoy them 24/7 if you so wished. (Though I suppose you could live in your Jag if you wanted to.)
You are my BFF.
About the Book
BLAZE OF MEMORY
BERKLEY BOOKS
Out 3 November 2009

Nalini Singh returns to the Psy/Changeling world and its "breathtaking blend of passion, adventure, and the paranormal" as a woman without a past becomes the pawn of a man who controls her future. . .
Dev Santos discovers her unconscious and battered, with no memory of who she is. All she knows is that she's dangerous. Charged with protecting his people's most vulnerable secrets, Dev is duty-bound to eliminate all threats. It's a task he's never hesitated to complete . . . until he finds himself drawn to a woman who might yet prove the enemy's most insidious weapon.
Stripped of her memories by a shadowy oppressor, and programmed to carry out cold-blooded murder, Katya Haas is fighting desperately for her sanity itself. Her only hope is Dev. But how can she expect to gain the trust of a man who could very well be her next target? For in this game, one must die. . .
Excerpt
More about Nalini's Books
Reviews
...When it comes to delivering stories that grab you by the throat and don't let go, Singh is in a class by herself! -- Romantic Times
...BLAZE OF MEMORY had me in tears with the tenderness that Dev and Katya exposed in each other. This story adds immensely to the series . . . You will want to revisit this love story again and again. -- Romance Junkies
Contest
Leave a comment with your answer to the question below by midnight (Pacific Time) on Friday November 6 to go into the draw to win a signed copy of Branded By Fire, the previous book in the series.
Read an excerpt of Branded by Fire (warning, excerpt may singe your eyebrows off).
Contest Question: If someone wiped your memory and left you on a hero's doorstep, which hero would you want it to be?
(Carolyn's answer: Eric Northman. Doh. Others of you may disagree which just means more Eric for Carolyn!)
Labels: Authors, contest, Interview
posted by Carolyn @ 11/02/2009 06:00:00 AM Permalink![]()
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Monday, October 19, 2009
Interview with Meljean Brook -- Plus a Contest!
Woot!! Meljean Brook is here! In case you don't know, Meljean's book Demon Forged hit bookstores the same day as Indiscreet. What you may also not know is that there is a character in Indiscreet whose last name, by a huge, amazing coincidence, has the last time Brook. Hard to believe, isn't it? Hah. I was desperate for a name for this guy, and there was Meljean's book. . . Brook. That name is teh awesome! said I. So I stole her name. It's in my book now. Forever.Meljean writes the awesome Guardian series, and if you like paranormal I really do urge you to read her books if you haven't already started. I love this series. I really really do.
Read on to the end of this post to find out how you can, if you're really clever, get yourself in a position to win a signed copy of Indiscreet AND Demon Forged.
Demon Forged, by the way, was a Romantic Times Top Pick, so you know it's good. (Hoo boy is it!)

Carolyn Interrogates Meljean
1. Thinking back to yourself at, say, five years old, were there any clues then that you'd end up writing novels? If so, what were they? When did you know you had the writing bug?
At five, definitely not. By sixth grade, though, I was reading constantly and making up my own stories. Most of them remained in my head, though I scribbled out ideas and scenes. By eighth grade, I was practicing my pseudonym autograph all over my notebook covers (it looks almost exactly the same as it does today.)
For a long time, though, it wasn't something I seriously pursued. I wrote all of the time, but I didn't think of it in terms of: I'm going to be published and make a living this way. I just really enjoyed writing, and I especially enjoyed writing the kinds of things that I loved reading. After a while, though, and a few trips through other (sensible) career choices, I decided: I'm going to try to do this. And then I got a little unexpected help in that area, and actually did it.
2. Regarding your fan fiction, can you talk a little bit about how, why, when and how long you were writing it?
As I mentioned above, I'd been fiddling with stories for a long time. I'd already noticed that I had a tendency to include romance and fantasy elements in my work, but I didn't really finish anything. I'd have great ideas that just petered out along the way. For a long time, this didn't bother me, because I was just having fun ... but then it started irritating me more and more. I wanted to write a romance (not as a career yet, but just to write it) but I knew I needed to finish it. But something just wasn't clicking.
And at the same time, I was in college, and the writing was kind of a side-thing. So were comic books, and reading fanfiction. And it just happened that I read a fanfic that inspired me, and I became obsessed with a certain couple -- Batman and Wonder Woman -- and so I wrote a chapter in a fanfic romance. Then another. And I said to myself: This is it. This is where we find out if you can finish a novel-length story. It took me a couple of months, but I did ... and I loved not just the story, but the process. So I wrote another fic, and another, for about two years.
But I realized I wasn't satisfied with writing these characters anymore, because I'd begun writing mostly alternate universe fics (where the characters are different versions of Batman and Wonder Woman -- alternate timelines, different worlds, etc). I still had a lot of BM/WW stories to tell, but I wanted to start writing my own characters. I also decided that I was going to finish the story, and submit it, and work toward being published. So I began altering and expanding on of the alternate universe fanfics, and that eventually morphed into the Guardian series.
And in what might have been the luckiest moment of my life, my fanfic caught the eye of my editor, who was a BM/WW fan. She asked if I had anything original to submit at the time I was working on what would become Demon Angel. That story wasn't strong enough yet for a contract, but she offered me a spot in the Hot Spell anthology.
3. Your style of story telling reminds me of some of the Epic Fantasy writers, whose complex characterizations unfold with such incredible richness. Is this a deliberate choice or is it just the way it works for you?
It's both, I think. The simple answer is that it's just the way it works for me -- it's the way my style and my voice just are. But it's also a choice as I'm writing. I love to peel away the layers, I love characters with complexity, who aren't easily defined. I love digging into them, and hurting them, and making them laugh and love. Plus, this is romance, and love is rarely simple -- so I do my best to show every side of a character, so that I am convinced (and hopefully the reader is, too) that the love is deep, and true, and will truly last an eternity.
4. How the heck did you come up with the idea of someone who looks in a mirror and sees Hell instead of his face? (Colin from Demon Angel) And a blacksmith/metalworker heroine (Irena in Demon Forged) explain that one, too.
For Colin, it was a combination of playing off of the classic "vampires can't see themselves in a mirror" myth, and me trying to think of the absolute worst thing that I could do to him. He's incredibly vain, so not seeing his reflection might have been enough -- but throwing in a curse and making him uncertain about whether the hell that he sees is a reflection of his soul (until he discovers the truth and learns that he's just seeing another realm)? Ah, the pain. It's delicious. And it adds another dimension to his vanity, one that makes his character a little more sympathetic, and ties into the plot of the books. It was just one of those ideas that started out very small (me, wondering whether I should let vampires see their reflection) and just worked on several levels.
Irena's character began in a similar way: just a tiny idea that grew into something bigger. In Demon Night, I introduced her, but didn't even mention her by name. She creates a little metal piano for Charlie (which was more about Charlie at that point than Irena), and Charlie describes her as, "a hard-edged female." And that was it.
But I knew I wanted to use this character, I knew she was going to be important in the series (I knew I was going to need a female character who fills the role that Irena eventually takes in Demon Forged) so I began developing her backstory. Once I did, the pieces just fell into place, and much like Colin's curse, her Gift played into both her character and the plot on several levels. I ended up making her into exactly what I needed from that one tiny line in Demon Night.
5. Since we're on the subject of Demon Forged, can you talk a little bit about the ideas and characters of the book? Have you had them bumping around in your head for a while?
To answer the second question first: Yes and no. In this series, I have a general outline of Where I Am Going and What Needs To Happen On The Way, but I don't have a habit of introducing or creating future heroes and heroines before I need them (with a few exceptions, like Michael). So I am usually about two books ahead when I begin deciding who is going to do what, and how they are going to do it. My process of creating Irena is a good example -- I've known from the beginning that I need someone to [avoiding spoilers] do what she does at the end of Demon Forged. I had a vague idea of what kind of a character could do it. And so I'll begin to shape the character as I go along, and I might begin to define and refine that shape in the books that come before hers -- so in that sense, they are in my head for a while, but not from the beginning of the series. Irena wasn't in my head at all as a character when I was writing Demon Angel, for example; there was just a Female Who Fulfills This Role Eventually blank to fill in.
And I think Irena filled that blank spectacularly. She's one of my favorites so far -- a sixteen-hundred-year-old former Roman slave turned Guardian, who has a Gift to manipulate metal, who is rough around the edges and blunt to a fault.
Then there's Alejandro, who is essentially her opposite: subtle, quiet, and with an aristocratic background. No, actually -- "opposite" is probably the wrong word. He's her complement. What she isn't, he is, and so although this makes for some wonderful tension and friction, they fit together wonderfully.
6. If you had a bazillion dollars, what would you get me? What would you buy your daughter?
I'd scour the world for a man who looks like Michael, pay for his wings to be surgically implanted, and then airlift him to your doorstep. Or, you know, just a drink at RWA, because I think that would be awesome to hang out.
I'd probably buy a bunch of plane tickets for my daughter, so that we could travel together. But she'd rather receive a pink unicorn doll or, "a dress with rainbows and stars and hearts on it, and rainbow socks, and sparkly heart shoes, and a ribbon with rainbow colors."
7. You write the most amazing, strong heroines. Please explain how you go about creating your heroines. The more detail the better because I need tips.
Pffft. I've read your heroines. You don't need tips.
But it's basically just starting with an idea, even a stereotype -- a heroine who is a demon, a geek, a recovering alcoholic, a Victorian-type of lady -- and then piling on the layers. I think that when the book is finished, it probably reads like I've been peeling away layers, but it's really just a matter of piling them on as I go and then digging into them.
So for Irena, I had my basic idea, and then I had to make a decision which adds kind of a shallow layer: She's angry.
Then I have to ask: Why is she angry?
And the answer might be as simple as: Because a demon hurt her.
But then it's: But why did that affect her so deeply?
And that's where I get to the fun stuff with my characters. It's not just knowing what happened to them, because everyone has crappy things happen -- but some things, we can shrug off more easily than others. So it's figuring out why it matters so much. What did that demon touch inside her that all of the demons she fought and killed before didn't?
When I hit that, it informs so much in the story: her character, of course, but also how she interacts with other characters, how she views the world, what issues she has to overcome or address when she falls in love, how and who she trusts ... and so even though I have plot points that I have to hit in this series, that I would have made happen no matter what character ended up being the heroine in that book, the way that the character approaches that plot point is so personal, it feels organic rather than just: Okay, this is where Some Random Female Fights A Dragon. At that point, it's not just about getting my series from point F to point G -- it's about Irena winning, and how she wins, and what it means to her.
At least that's how I hope it works.
8. Just why do you love Wonder Woman so much?
I can't deny that some of it is nostalgia. I loved Wonder Woman in Superfriends and I loved Lynda Carter's show, and so the character holds a special place in my little-girl heart.
But I know it's more than that. Part of it is that I've always been drawn to female superheroes and strong female characters on TV -- Charlie's Angels, the Bionic Woman, Firestar in the Spider-Man cartoon, Diana in V (even more than Julie, the heroine of the series), just to start. Why am I drawn to them? I couldn't say. But I do know that Wonder Woman seemed to represent the best and the strongest of them all.
So I think it's fair to say that for a long time, it was just that she represented something. It wasn't the character herself. But then I began reading comic books, and found more there to love. The idea that she will fight, but first she'll try to find a way to solve problems without violence. That she's not about making people better, but about people making themselves better ... whatever "better" means. Which, when written down, sounds really corny -- but I also think it's something that resonates with me. I'm like Mulder, I guess: I want to believe. Not believe that Wonder Woman is real, but that whatever she represents can be.
Then again, maybe it's no more corny that believing that romantic love can be a powerful, transformative, wonderful, complicated, and GOOD thing, and writing a series of books exploring that idea.
But it's not just feelings and ideas -- she's had some kickass stories, too. There's a great series on livejournal that talks about them: When Wondy Was Awesome (http://bluefall.insanejournal.com/13190.html#cutid1) by bluefall. I don't agree with everything bluefall has to say about the character and her adventures, but I do a lot of it.
9. Complete this sentence: Michael belongs to Carolyn because . . . If you can't explain (or won't because it's just so obvious) then can you tell us about how his character evolves through the series? Any hints about what happens to him and when his book is coming up?
Michael belongs to Carolyn because ... I'm afraid of being hurt if I say he doesn't.
Ha, I love questions about Michael, because I just can't answer a lot of them. Michael is a difficult character to write because he's SO old, and he's so powerful, and he's seen so much ... and yet I have to imagine all of that and what it would be like. So as much as I love his character, I also recognize that he's kind of unknowable ... and that I'm going to have to make him knowable in order for his romance to work. So, to that end, I'm completely destroying him (so that I can show what he's made of when I put him back together.)
...and that's all I can say about that.
His book has always been planned as the last book, and I've known who his heroine is since Demon Angel. His book should be the eighth full-length book, which is only three away: first is Demon Blood, then another untitled Guardian book which will feature a h/h from Demon Blood, and then Michael's book.
10. What else are you working on? I understand you have a Steampunk book coming out.
The steampunk series is something that has been germinating since I first submitted my Demon Angel manuscript to my editor. If she didn't like that, I was going to write a steampunk proposal. So that's been in the back of my mind for years now, and so last year, the chance came up to propose it again. I pitched it as League of Extraordinary Gentlemen meets The Pirates of the Caribbean, called it the Iron Seas series, and my editor gave me the go-ahead.
The pitch isn't accurate, although the basic elements are there: There are pirates, and there's an alternate Victorian atmosphere with clockwork and steam-based technology. There's also giant squid, nanotech, zombies, dirigibles, and some sexy, sexy times.
And I love writing it. I don't have a release date yet for the first novel, The Iron Duke, but the first novella will be coming out in August 2010, in the anthology BURNING UP, with Angela Knight, Nalini Singh, and Virginia Kantra. Huge, huge fun.
The Contest Low Down
For a chance to win a signed copy of Meljean's Demon Forged, all you have to do is leave a comment. If you want to add in something about why Michael belongs to me, that would make me feel happy, but not affect the chances of your being the winner, who will be randomly chosen on Friday, October 23. If you don't leave me a way to contact me, then check back here Friday or Saturday to see if you won.
For a chance to win a signed copy of Indiscreet, head on over to Meljean's blog. I'm over there today where I'm sure she's being super nice to me.
Labels: Authors, contest, free stuff, Interview
posted by Carolyn @ 10/19/2009 06:00:00 AM Permalink![]()
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Monday, October 05, 2009
Interview with Author Courney Milan - Plus a Contest
Courtney Milan
This Wicked Gift in THE HEART OF CHRISTMAS, HQN, October 2009
PROOF BY SEDUCTION, HQN, January 2010
The Interview
Q: Tell us a little bit about yourself.
I was born in a Russian gulag, and learned to read by scraping twigs against the....
Oh my God! Courtney, you too? Didn't those twigs really--
Oh. Wait. You want me to tell the truth?
Well, only if it's no trouble.
All righty then. I've held about nine or ten very different jobs, ranging from sales to graphic design to administration of a Linux cluster to animal training. Also, I'm a liar, so some of the things I say may not be 100% true.
Q: Why historical romance?
This one is easy: I can't write contemporaries, because I know absolutely nothing about popular culture. Nada. Not a thing. This is not to say you need to be a pop culture maven to write contemporaries, but it's just one of those little things I've learned: Never lie about subject matter to someone who knows more than you do. You'll never fool them.
Q: Team Eric or Team Bill? Edward or Jacob? (If you answer Bill and Edward, I won't hold it against you. Promise.) Why?
Um, who are Eric and Bill? (See above question.) As for Edward versus Jacob, that's easy. Bella can keep Edward. She deserves him. :)
I will email you some references. Because I'm just generous that way.
Q: Did you train your cat to be an attack cat or did you just get lucky? Do you have a picture you can share?
The cat came pre-trained to attack. We were very lucky with this cat; we got him because a "friend" asked us to watch him over his vacation. Vacation ended and the "friend" never showed up to pick up his cat. Needless to say, we kept the cat and ditched the friend.
Good move. An attack cat is invaluable.
You can see a picture of him, prepared to attack my carefully-built fortress of author copies of my novella

Q: Are you a plotter or a pantser or somewhere in between?
I'm definitely a plotter. And I plot by writing. The way it works is that in order to really get going on a story I need to know the beginning, the middle, and the end. That may sound like the whole story, but really, it's about 30,000 words--there's the part after the beginning but before the middle, and then the part before the middle but after the beginning and after the part after the part after the beginning.... trust me, it's just as confusing inside my head. So I basically have three scenes in my head when I start writing. Everything else I figure out in writing.
Q: Can you tell us a little bit about the kind of stories you write?
Some people write stories about good people who have bad things happen to them. I write stories about good people who make bad mistakes. In some sense, I think my characters always bring the meat of the story upon themselves, by making choices that while often well-intentioned, are fatally flawed. This is not to say that my characters get into bad situations by their own stupidity--quite the opposite. In fact, if anything, I think that relying too much on intelligence and overthinking are more likely to get my characters in trouble than, say, foolish choices made without thought.
I like writing stories like that because I feel it really pushes my characters to grow emotionally, to discover things about themselves, to rediscover the notion of honor and to decide that they are worthy of respect and love. I really believe it's hard to love another person if you don't love yourself, and so it's crucial that during the course of the story, my heroes and heroines learn to trust themselves as well as the people around them.
Q: I'm pimping you, Courtney. Tell me about your upcoming single title.
On January 1, 2010 (that's a lot of 1's!), my single title debut, PROOF BY SEDUCTION, is coming out. Proof by Seduction is the story of Gareth Carhart, the Marquess of Blakely, an inveterate scientist who is stunned to find out that his cousin and heir has been visiting a fortune teller for advice. He decides to prove Madame Esmerelda is a fraud. But what he assumes will be a simple task becomes drawn out by a simpler occurrence: He sees her almost naked. And once he's seen behind her disguise, he realizes that she is far more complex than a simple fraud. False as Madame Esmerelda's predictions might be, the woman who plays Madame Esmerelda, Jenny Keeble, is more compelling than any of the fortunes she manufactures. And before he can understand what's happening, he realizes that the way he feels about her can't fit inside a scientific proposition.
To put it in visual terms:

xkcd
PROOF is also the story of Jenny Keeble, an illegitimate byblow who has never known her parents, and who's struggled for respect all her life. She's found a measure of that respect telling rich people what they want to hear. She has money, security, and people who look up to her. But when she meets Gareth, she begins to realize that all of that means nothing if she can't respect herself.
That sounds so awesome. I can't wait to read it.
Q: What else do you have for us to look forward to?

Sometime in 2010, after PROOF BY SEDUCTION, the follow-up, TRIAL BY DESIRE, will be released. TRIAL BY DESIRE is the story of Ned Carhart, the cousin of the hero of PROOF BY SEDUCTION.
But before we even get there, sometime in late November/early December I'll be posting a free read. You know how Harlequin Historicals sometimes have titles like, "Smashingly Drunk Lord, Feisty Maiden?" This will have a similar title. Completely similar. Except... totally different.
Smashingly Drunk Lord, Feisty Maiden was one of my fav reads of 2005.
Q: Can you provide a fun fact or two about your story?
Fun facts! Oh, man, whenever I hear "fun facts" my brain automatically translates that into "lies." What does that say about me? Nothing I haven't already said, I suppose, but alliteration sounds so immediately hyperbolic that it gets me thinking about all kinds of things that are fun. And you know what else alliterates with "fun" and "fact"? Yeah, you got it. Fake. So I will tell you three fun facts about my novella, but one thing I say in this section will be completely fake.
We here at Writer's Diary are all about really good lies. Lie on, Courtney. Lie on.
- I named the hero of my novella after a famous football star.
- I originally described this novella as Dickens's A Christmas Carol meets 419eater.com, but it really ended up being more like The Damnation of Faust takes polite tea with 419eater.com, but then goes on its merry way to a happy ending.
- Hidden inside this Christmas novella is a shocking truth: My novella almost never mentions Christmas. Hidden inside the lack of mention of Christmas in this novella is an even more shocking truth: Chapters of the novella parallel the libretto of Handel's Messiah.
What's the lie? Identify it in comments--and two people who correctly identify the lie will win a copy of my novella! (If nobody correctly identifies the lie, I will give out three copies at random.)
The Important Stuff
Read an Excerpt
Buy a copy of This Wicked Gift
And leave a comment. You could win big!
Labels: Authors, books, contest, Interview
posted by Carolyn @ 10/05/2009 06:00:00 AM Permalink![]()
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Monday, September 28, 2009
Interview With Author Marilyn Brant - CONTEST!
About Marilyn Brant

Marilyn Brant is the award-winning women's fiction author of ACCORDING TO JANE, the story of a modern woman who receives dating advice from the spirit of Jane Austen (October 2009), and her second forthcoming novel about three suburban moms who shake up their lives and their marriages (October 2010), both from Kensington Books.
As a former teacher, library staff member, freelance magazine writer and national book reviewer for Romantic Times, Marilyn has spent much of her life lost in literature. She received her M.A. in educational psychology from Loyola University Chicago, dabbled in both fiction and art at Northwestern University, studied the works of Austen at Oxford University and is an active member of the Jane Austen Society of North America. Her debut novel won RWA's prestigious Golden Heart Award© in 2007.
Marilyn lives in the northern Chicago suburbs with her family, but she also hangs out online at her blog "Brant Flakes." When she isn't rereading Jane's books or enjoying the latest releases by her writer friends, she's working on her next novel, eating chocolate indiscriminately and hiding from the laundry.
Check out her website: www.marilynbrant.com
About the Book
In Marilyn Brant's smart, wildly inventive debut, one woman in search of herself receives advice from the ultimate expert in matters of the heart. . . It begins one day in sophomore English class, just as Ellie Barnett's teacher is assigning Jane Austen's Pride and Prejudice. From nowhere comes a quiet "tsk" of displeasure. The target: Sam Blaine, the cute bad boy who's teasing Ellie mercilessly, just as he has since kindergarten. Entirely unbidden, as Jane might say, the author's ghost has taken up residence in Ellie's mind, and seems determined to stay there. Jane's wise and witty advice guides Ellie through the hell of adolescence and beyond, serving as the voice she trusts, usually far more than her own. Years and boyfriends come and go--sometimes a little too quickly, sometimes not nearly fast enough. But Jane's counsel is constant, and on the subject of Sam, quite insistent. Stay away, Jane demands. He is your Mr. Wickham.
Still, everyone has something to learn about love--perhaps even Jane herself. And lately, the voice in Ellie's head is being drowned out by another, urging her to look beyond everything she thought she knew and seek out her very own, very unexpected, happy ending. . .
Praise for ACCORDING TO JANE
A warm, witty and charmingly original story.
--Susan Wiggs, #1 New York Times bestselling author
An engaging read for all who have been through the long, dark, dating wars, and still believe there's sunshine, and a Mr. Darcy, at the end of the tunnel.
--Cathy Lamb, author of Henry's Sisters
This is a must-read for Austen lovers as well as for all who believe in the possibility of a happily-ever-after ending.
--Holly Chamberlin, author of One Week In December
An October "Fresh Pick" from Fresh Fiction!!
Jane Austen fans will revel in this modern day unique twist on a classic, as well as learning interesting facts about Jane herself. There is just enough mystery of ‘why’ to keep you guessing, and the ending is thoroughly satisfying. This was a truly, irrevocably inspiring novel.
--Kelly Moran, Bookpleasures (5 stars)
Just when you think Jane Austen could not appear in anything new, a refreshing reincarnation occurs as Marilyn Brant provides an engaging modern day take on the writer. Ellie is a terrific lead character as she adapts to the voice in her head while Sam is her nemesis...readers will thoroughly enjoy this fun contemporary romance that also provides insight into Jane Austen and her characters.
--Harriet Klausner (4 stars)
According To Jane is a delight from beginning to end...a definite keeper that I can see myself returning to time and again, just for the happy pick me up feeling it gives me. I’m eagerly looking forward to Ms. Brant’s next book.
-- Manic Readers (4.5 stars)
All I can say is, again without any spoilers is that Marilyn Brant you have a new super fan and I am singing your praises...5 STARS--LOVED IT! COULDN'T PUT IT DOWN.
-- Book Junkie (5 stars)
According to Jane is an intriguing, appealing story full of warmth and wit...a fast read, perfect for the busy woman and the author has a definite gift for keeping you turning those pages. This is a book you don’t want to miss if you’re a fan of Austen, romance, coming of age, women's fiction, or if you’re just looking for a highly entertaining story from an author with superb style and fresh voice.
-- Working Girl Reviews (5 shoes/best book)
The Interview
Q: Tell us about your latest release and the inspiration behind it.
My debut novel, According to Jane, is the story of a modern woman who--for almost two decades--has the ghost of Jane Austen in her head giving her dating advice. I first read Pride & Prejudice as a high-school freshman. Like my heroine Ellie, I raced through the novel way ahead of the reading assignments. I loved both the story and Austen's writing style immediately. Her books changed the way I perceived the behavior of everyone around me, and I spent the rest of freshman year trying to figure out which Austen character each of my friends and family members most resembled! Also like Ellie, I had a few (okay, a lot) of less-than-wonderful boyfriends, and I would have loved to have been given romantic advice from the author I most respected and the one who'd written one of my all-time favorite love stories.
Q: Any great fan/fan mail stories you care to share?
The book was just released on September 29th, so first impressions are still coming in, but I've gotten some truly wonderful emails from people who read the ARCs this summer. One of my favorites is from a woman who won a copy of the book in a contest and emailed me to say that she'd finished the book in a day and was on an emotional high from reading it. She added, "Sometimes I go through phase where I'm so blase about reading fiction and focus mainly on non-fiction (my usual staple), but once in a blue moon, a book grips me and makes me fall in love with fiction again. Thank you. A very grateful reader." I will always, always love that message!
Q: Which scene in your novel did you love writing? Why?
One scene I had a lot of fun with was the bar scene in the first chapter where my main character runs into her ex-high-school boyfriend for the first time in four years. It was a situation I had never experienced personally, but I could imagine the comical possibilities so clearly and feel and the frustration of my heroine as if I'd been the one standing there, facing the jerk and his latest girlfriend, while Jane Austen ranted about how "insufferable" he was.
Q: What were some of your favorite books as a kid?
In junior high and early high school, I loved The Witch of Blackbird Pond by Elizabeth George Speare, The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy by Douglas Adams, A Separate Peace by John Knowles, Love Story by Erich Segal, Illusions by Richard Bach and, of course, everything by Austen. When I was an elementary schooler, I also loved Caddie Woodlawn by Carol Ryrie Brink, Escape to Witch Mountain by Alexander Key and all the Nancy Drew mysteries.
Q: Which 'craft' book has inspired or helped you the most throughout your writing career?
I'm a BIG fan of craft books, so I have more than one! I used Blake Snyder's SAVE THE CAT! almost religiously in the plotting of my past several books. I'm still very sad that he's no longer with us. As far as a great reference guide, Robert McKee's STORY is incredible. It has more information about writing craft than I can ever internalize. Also, whenever I need a more emotional pick-me-up, I grab the Ralph Keyes book THE COURAGE TO WRITE. I recommend it to everyone.
Q: If you could ask one author (in all of history) for one piece of advice, who would you ask and what you would want to know from them?
Oooh, getting to be like my main character here! If I could have asked Jane Austen for advice before I was married, it would have definitely revolved around which type of man was the right one for me. (She would intuitively know the answer, I'm sure.) However, even without Jane's help, I was fortunate to find "my Darcy." J Now, I would ask her for her thoughts on the crafting of a perfect novel. What were the qualities she felt a great piece of fiction should possess? What was she consciously trying to achieve with her novels?
Q: Do you have a sample chapter posted?
Yes! On my website I have a segment of Chapter One available for anyone interested in reading. Also, if you go to the Amazon page for According to Jane there's a "Search Inside This Book" feature, and people can read samples from scenes throughout the novel.
Q: What is your author fantasy?
I'm secretly, unrelentingly ambitious, even when I have no right to be. Of course I want to hit the NYT bestseller list and get a movie deal. Also, I'd like an Oprah invitation and a few RITAs. However, these are not quite enough to satisfy every daydream I've ever had. I'd greatly enjoy winning an Emmy, a Grammy, an Oscar, a Tony and an Olympic gold medal (in both ice skating and gymnastics). The fact that I'm pathetic on skates and terrified of the uneven bars is, in no way, a deterrent from these unrealistic fantasies. My simple ability to imagine them, makes them almost real. Furthermore, I like shiny things (although I don't like to dust them), so I hereby promise that if I win ANY heavy golden statuettes--ever--I will dust faithfully. Especially that Grammy award. Really.
Q: What's next for you?
I get to visit a number of book clubs that chose my debut novel, According to Jane, as their monthly book pick--wildly fun!--while also starting the production/promotion process all over again for my next women's fiction project. That second book is done, but we're still working on finding the right title. It's a modern fairytale about three suburban moms who shake up their marriages and their lives when one woman asks her friends a somewhat shocking question… That comes out in October 2010.
Q: Name 3-4 of your favorite musical artists/groups. Did you use any musical references in your novel? If so, do they play a significant role?
Oh, yes! I use an '80s soundtrack through the entire novel and songs of that era play a pretty significant role in the story. "True" by Spandau Ballet, "Make Me Lose Control" by Eric Carmen, "I Want to Know What Love Is" by Foreigner and "You Give Love a Bad Name" by Bon Jovi are four of the biggies, but there are so many... I think high school is always a time in a person's life where the music is especially memorable. What's on the radio when we're teens becomes the soundtrack of our youth, so the lyrics of those popular songs tend to take on heightened meaning and get all wrapped up with our burgeoning adulthood. The result of this combination can be delightfully melodramatic. '80s music aside, I love the songwriting of Rob Thomas/Matchbox 20, Coldplay, Rascal Flatts, the Goo Goo Dolls, Keith Urban, Eagles and post-Eagles Don Henley, Jackson Browne and just about anything Andrew Lloyd Webber composes.
Q: What's one piece of writing advice you've found valuable on your journey to publication?
Don't follow trends just because you think it'll be an easier sell. And write the books that fit your voice. If what you love writing happens to be a hot-selling genre, great. If your writing voice happens to be perfect for the genre you want to write in and love to read, that's awesome, too. But--if not--write long and hard enough to find what DOES fit you and your style best. Because then, even if it takes longer to make that first sale than you expect, you're writing the kinds of stories you most enjoy, and that passion has a way of working itself into the projects you're creating.
Q: Did you have any input on the cover, and are you happy with the finished product?
I was asked for input on the cover by my editor, and I sent Kensington pages of possible scene ideas, plus a plot summary and descriptions of the main characters. In the end, I have no idea whether or not my notes were helpful, but the cover didn't look anything like I'd imagined it--it looked far, far better! I couldn't be more pleased with the way our cover designer, Kristine Mills-Noble, envisioned the look of the book. I'm really excited to see what she'll come up with for my second novel.
Q: What do you think readers might be surprised to know about you?
This has absolutely nothing to do with writing (which is, perhaps, why it'll be surprising), but I was a member of a touring dance group in college and spent six weeks dancing through Europe the summer I was 19. We performed at festivals in France, Spain, Switzerland and Italy, and I met some absolutely fascinating people. That experience solidified both my love of travel and my lifelong adoration of the jitterbug. It also greatly aided in my appreciation of European men...
Q: Where do you write? Describe your writing space – is it a cluttered mess or minimalist heaven?!
I write in my home office--a messy, absolutely cluttered place--I won't deny it! There are stacks of paper and towers of books everywhere, but also a very nice window overlooking our backyard. Sometimes I'll write at a local coffee shop (either with my laptop or, most often, just with pen and notebook paper), and that location has the advantage of endless cups of coffee and occasional snacks.
Q: What are you reading at the moment?
Some entertaining Austen-inspired fiction, like Beth Pattillo's Jane Austen Ruined My Life, and the amazing Shaffer/Barrows novel The Guernsey Literary and Potato Peel Pie Society.
Q: Are you a member of a writer's group? If so, how has it helped your writing?
I'm a member of Chicago-North RWA, and it's an incredibly strong critique chapter. Every month, three members have the opportunity to have up to 20 pages of their work critiqued by those attending the meetings (usually between 25-30 published/aspiring authors). The feedback is excellent, and it really helped me when I was a newbie to hear what more experienced writers were saying about some of my earlier work. Not only what confused them or what they thought was structurally unsound, but also what they felt were some of my writing strengths. That's priceless insight when you're just starting out. I can contrast this experience with semester-long university-level fiction workshops, which I personally didn't find to be nearly as constructive. In my opinion, if a new writer ever finds herself surrounded by people whose main objective is to show off how clever they are or to alter a piece of writing in a way that messes with her author voice, she should sprint, not merely run, to the nearest exit. It worth hunting for a group that will help you build upon your writing talents while, at the same time, assisting you in strengthening your weaknesses.
Q: Could you please tell us a little about your writing background and how you made your first sale (including the title and publisher)?
Aside from being on the newspaper and yearbook staff in high school and publishing some academic work in college, I didn't take writing seriously until I was about 30. I was a stay-at-home mom with a baby and desperately in need of a creative outlet, so I began writing poems, essays on being a parent and educational articles for family magazines. I wrote my first book having never taken a creative-writing class or even having read a book on the craft of fiction. (The lack of craft is very evident when I reread chapters from that first book, btw! I don't recommend this level of ignorance. . .) I got some feedback though--mostly negative--from a prominent literary agency, which led me to study fiction formally, delve into craft books and, eventually, go to my first writing conference. It was there that I heard about RWA. I joined, wrote three more unpublished manuscripts and, then, came up with the idea for According to Jane. My agent signed me on this book and submitted it to editors, but it needed to be significantly restructured before it sold. Nine months after it won the Golden Heart and was revised (again), it finally did sell--to John Scognamiglio at Kensington--on a sunny and surrealistic day in April 2008
Buy the Book
Title: According to Jane
Author: Marilyn Brant
Publisher: Kensington Books (trade paperback)
Price: $14.00 U.S./$16.95 Canada
Release Date: October 1, 2009 (on-shelf date: Sept. 29, 2009)
ISBN-13: 978-0-7582-3461-2
Pages: 288
Kensington's page about the book
Buy from Amazon
How to get your chance to win an ARC (Advanced Reading Copy) of According to Jane
Leave a comment to this post in which you tell me what advice you wish you could get from Jane. Like, say, should I wear the pelisse or the spencer? Or maybe, does this carriage dress make me look fat?
If you don't leave me a way to contact you if you win, then you must commit to checking back on our about Monday, October 5 to see if you've won.
Easy! Go forth and enter.
Labels: Authors, contest, Interview
posted by Carolyn @ 9/28/2009 06:00:00 AM Permalink![]()
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