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Debut Author Spotlight: Jesi Lea Ryan

Debut Author: Jesi Lea Ryan
Debut Novel: Four Thousand Miles

Jesi and I connected through the great land of Twitter, and she offered to send me a copy of her debut novel, Four Thousand Miles. I gratefully accepted, another book to read and another new author to meet, and Jesi agreed to do a Q&A session with me. After checking out her blog, http://diaryofabibliophile-jesilea.blogspot.com/, I found out we are from the same hometown of Dubuque, Iowa- we even went to the same high school, just during separate years. What a small world! Jesi was really inspiring to chat with, and gave some great insight on why she decided to begin her journey as a writer without an agent. She works with a fabulous publishing company, DCL Publications, and is steadily writing her second novel- which I can’t wait for! Four Thousand Miles was a terrific story filled with romance, uncertainty, and my favorite part- travel! Read a clip of my review:

“Natalie was a terrific heroine, and I supported her when she boarded that plane to London. There were real people with real problems going through the motions and figuring out their lives. And I love that! I think Jesi Lea Ryan did an outstanding job in Four Thousand Miles, and I hope she has more for us soon.”

So please check out Jesi Lea Ryan by checking out her blog or follow her on Facebook or Twitter. You can find your copy of Four Thousand Miles at DCL Publications.

Author Profile: Marta Acosta

Author Name: Marta Acosta

Website: http://www.martaacosta.com/

Bio: Marta is from the San Francisco Bay Area and has degrees in English & American Lit and Creative Writing. Before becoming a published author, Marta worked for non-profits and a theater company, and loved to read books and talk about them. She then became a frequent contributor of home, gardening, and style columns and features for newspapers and magazines. Marta now has published novels under her own name, and also under the name of Grace Coopersmith.
Titles: Happy Hour at Casa Dracula, Midnight Brunch, The Bride of Casa Dracula, and Haunted Honeymoon.
Bio Retrieved from martaacosta.com

http://chicklitplus.com/author-profile-grace-coopersmith/

Debut Author Spotlight: Aidan Donnelley Rowley

Debut Author: Aidan Donnelley Rowley
Debut Novel: Life After Yes
I met Aidan because her debut novel, Life After Yes, was the final selection for the fabulous book club I belong to- SheKnows. The SheKnows bloggers got to vote on our last book, and I am sure glad we chose Life After Yes. Here is a clip of my five star review:
“Life After Yes was one of my favorite reads of 2010. I commend Aidan Donnelley Rowley for writing such a truthful story, with real characters and real problems. I almost feel this novel should come with a warning label: Will you risk asking yourself the questions Quinn is asking of herself? Are you brave enough to face the answers? I recommend everyone to read this book, chick lit fan or not. I think we can all identify with a piece of Quinn, and take away a lesson on true happiness.”
After our selection was chosen, I hopped online to find out more about Aidan Donnelley Rowley, and was pleasantly surprised to find that she has a pretty unique blog going. Aidan tackles numerous subjects, ranging from pregnancy and parenthood, health and happiness, and of course- writing. Her blog is titled “Ivy League Insecurities” which I found interesting. Like her main character Quinn in Life After Yes, Aidan is Ivy League educated, and attended Yale College and Columbia Law School. She worked as a lawyer for a hot second, but now has focused on her family- who includes her two young daughters- and her writing. Aidan blogs about her daily life, her struggles as a writer, and her insecurities. I like her blog because she feels like a real person. Yeah, she has an Ivy League education. And yes, she has published a fantastic novel. But she isn’t afraid to admit her insecurities. I find her writing refreshing, meaningful, and inspiring.
So please take some time out to swing by Ivy League Insecurities and drop a line to Aidan, or visit her on Twitter or Facebook. If you haven’t picked up your copy yet of Life After Yes, you will want to get that on your Christmas list. I gave Aidan’s debut a five star review, and I’m sure many other readers will agree!

Author Profile: Shannon McKelden

Author Name: Shannon McKelden

Website: http://shannonmckelden.com/

Bio: Shannon knew she enjoyed writing since the sixth grade, when her short stories earned her A+ grades. While she enjoyed writing, that dream got sidetracked as she worked in a shoe store and a bank, graduated high school, got married and took on a mortgage. After her daughter was born, Shannon was able to start dabbling in the writing again- and went on to publish short stories for magazines. It took a few years later and finding the Romance Writers of America, but Shannon now has published three novels.

Currently: Shannon lives in the Pacific Northwest with her husband, two kids, three cats, a dog and a crow.
Titles: Venus Envy, Venus Guy Trap, and The Kiss Test
Bio Retrieved from shannonmckelden.com

Interview with Jesi Lea Ryan

Q: What is your favorite part of the writing process?
A: I love writing beginnings. The first five or six chapters of a novel come very easy to me. I typically plan out the characters and the basic plot in my head before I even sit down to the computer, so those chapters just flow out of me. It really is the easiest and most exciting part for me.

Q: What was the hardest part about finding an agent?
A: Everything about finding an agent is hard—that’s why I am going without one for my first book. The market right now is really tough for new writers to break in to. Agents are reluctant to take chance on new talent when publishing houses are decreasing production. Every agent that I have talked to tells of how busy they are with their existing clients. That makes it hard to take on new talent.

I queried agents for about two months, but in May 2010, I while attending the Romantic Times Convention, I met Jean Watkins, the managing editor for DCL Publications. She liked my idea and asked me to send her the first three chapters. Less than a week later, Jean offered me a contract to purchase it. You’d be surprised how much of this business depends on meeting the right person at the right time.

Q: Your first novel, Four Thousand Miles, was released October 7th. Where did the inspiration for this story come from?
A: I was traveling in England last summer and ended up staying at this medieval farm that has been turned into a bed & breakfast. It was set in the Kent countryside in the middle of sheep pastures and wild flowers. It was truly the most romantic setting I could imagine. I started day dreaming about Natalie, my main character while I was there. What better place for an American woman to fall in love with a hot guy with a British accent!

Q: How long did it take you to write Four Thousand Miles?
A: It took about four months, but I wasn’t writing every day. Like I said, I am good with beginnings, but I tend to stall out about six-ten chapters in. Then, I take a bit of a break and think about where I want the story to go and how it will progress. I tend to change my mind a lot in that period. Since I don’t believe in sitting in front of a blank screen, I put the story down and walk away for a while. I might not be physically writing, but I am planning it out on my mind. Once I am comfortable, I go back to the computer. I might do that three or four times during the course of a novel.

Q: When you were in the writing process, did you have a certain routine you followed? (such as so many words written a day, so many pages edited, only wrote in one place?)
A: Not at all. I am awful when it comes to writing organization. I don’t plot outline, I never know how it is going to end and I don’t force myself to write when the muse is not calling me. That, by the way, goes against every piece of writing advice I have ever been given, but it works for me.

Q: How did you celebrate when you sold Four Thousand Miles to DCL Publications?
A: I didn’t really. I guess I kept waiting for something bad to happen. The company offered me the contract before seeing the whole novel and I was suspicious. I thought they might read the full manuscript and change their mind! I guess publishing a book was such a dream come true that it took a while to sink in.

Q: We are from the same hometown- Dubuque, IA- though we both no longer live there. What are some things you miss about Dubuque? I always ride the Fourth Street Elevator when I’m back!
A: I live a bit closer to Dubuque than you do, so I probably get back more often. My mother lives there along with a few other relatives. Mostly, I spend time with them. It is fascinating though how much the city has changed in the eight years since I’ve been gone. The city has done a great job on the new river front.

Q: What are you currently reading, and what are some of your favorite genres?
A: I read a lot—several books a week. I’m pretty open to genres. I don’t read westerns or sci-fi. I tend to gravitate to female authors, but not purposely.

At this very moment, I’m reading two books, one by my bed and one that I keep in my purse for reading every time I get a chance. Nightkeepers by Jessica Andersen is my at-home book. It’s a paranormal romance revolving around the Mayan end-of-world prophecy of 2012. My purse book is the steampunk novel Changeless by Gail Carriger. Oh! I’m also listening to a book on tape in the car—The Inner Circle by TC Boyle…one of my favorite authors.

Q: What is your best advice for aspiring writers, especially those who didn’t go to college to pursue a degree in writing?
A: Some of the best writers never went to college. Don’t get me wrong, I love to learn and I think my education was valuable, but even my writing program in college didn’t prepare me for the business of writing like writing query letters and finding an agent. If a person seriously wants to write, my best advice is to read. Read a lot. Read many different genres and levels of writing. Read commercial fiction and literary fiction. Find out what type of book you’d like to write and really study how other authors write books similar to yours. There is a pattern to novels. If you read enough of them, you will unconsciously follow it.

Q: Where would be your dream vacation?
A: I LOVE to travel! I have been to some amazing places over the years. One place that I want to visit that I haven’t yet is India. I love the culture, the food, the twangy sitar music… I actually planned to go there a few years ago, but the trip fell through and I went to Nicaragua instead.

Q: Lastly, where can readers go to purchase Four Thousand Miles?
A: That every easy! The book will be available at most online sellers within the next couple of months, but until then, you can download the ebook straight to any computer or e-reader from the following website http://www.thedarkcastlelords.com/romance-ebooks-15.htm. The cost is only $6.50…way cheaper than new release print books. Best of all—no shipping and handling fees!

Guest Post from Author Heather Wardell

I don’t believe in writing absolute garbage just to have words on the page, but I also don’t believe in editing while writing a first draft. I’ll write, “Ian smelled great” in the first draft, and by the final draft it’ll be, “I closed my eyes and breathed in Ian’s scent of fabric softener and lumber. Only the wife of a carpenter would find the smell of wood sexy.” The short version is fine for a first draft, and it avoids me sitting there staring at the screen or page trying to find the perfect words. The first draft isn’t about perfect words. It’s about words that do the job.

So how do you get from “Ian smelled great” to the more detailed lines? Here’s how I do it.

This picture shows a page from one of my current projects, which I plan to release in early 2011. The main character, Mary, has just been turned down for her dream chef job and is now camping out on the restaurant’s doorstep until the owner Kegan agrees to hire her. On this particular page, Mary goes to a nearby coffee shop and is then confronted by one of Kegan’s staff members.

Note that I am working on a print-out, double-spaced and single-sided, of the manuscript. It might seem like a waste of paper, but take a look at how many notes I’ve added (and this is an average page, not one with unusually high changes). Trying to squish those into tiny margins would make the process impossible.

I use my own code to mark up the pages. There’s a “No P” scrawled about halfway down, which means that I don’t want a new paragraph there, and “New P” in the second last paragraph where I do want one. There are official proofreading markings out there, but I find them too hard to remember. These are just for me so I can use whatever I want.

Before going through the book scene-by-scene, I like to read the entire book top to bottom. I do my best not to fiddle with or peek at the manuscript between revisions, so this read brings it back to my mind and also lets me get an overview of what’s really on the page instead of what I think I’ve written. It’s amazing how different those two can be.

After that, I start with the first scene and read it sentence by sentence. At least, I try to. In practice I bounce around the page, making a correction in sentence five and then going back to change the change when I hit sentence eight. But I do give each sentence my full attention at least once.

I’m watching for emotions and physical sensations and people’s movement in space. I’m making sure that I haven’t over-complicated a situation. (In the first draft I had Mary carrying a cushion around so she didn’t have to sit on the cold concrete in the rain. I removed it because it didn’t add anything but an unnecessary prop.)

I’m also analyzing how I’ve put the words together: if I repeat words or re-use a structure, I want to be sure I’ve done it intentionally. (I learned so much about this from Margie Lawson’s “Deep EDITS” online course; while I don’t use her actual editing technique I still refer to my notes for the rhetorical devices that can add such depth and interest to writing.)

Be especially vigilant in the early scenes. Finding a character’s voice can take a while, and I for one tend to do the written equivalent of running around in circles yelling, “Hey, where are you?” at the beginning of a book, which results in a lot of unnecessary elements.

When I’ve finished a scene, I type it in right away. (Take another look at the notes above. If I left it until I’d finished the whole book, I’d have no idea what I was trying to do!) I don’t type mindlessly, though. I read as I go and pay careful attention, and often change a word here or there as I enter the corrections.

After the typing, I re-read the scene, out loud if I can and in my head if I can’t, to make sure it all flows, and then it’s on to the next.

I won’t bore you with the second draft of the entire page shown above, but I will give you the before-and-after versions of the last few paragraphs.

First draft:
“He’s said it himself and it didn’t make any difference.”

She squatted down in front of me. “I’ve worked for Kegan since he opened Steel, longer than anyone else here. So listen up. What you’re doing is pointless. If you think he’s going to feel bad because you look so pathetic–”

“I don’t think that.”

Second draft:
I wouldn’t have expected him to do such a thing. “He’s said it himself and it didn’t make any difference. Why does he think sending you would work better?”

She didn’t bother answering. “I’ve worked for Kegan since he opened Steel, longer than anyone else here. So listen up. What you’re doing is pointless. He’ll never hire you. He said as much yesterday when we asked why you were out here.”

My stomach twisted at this revelation. He really didn’t plan to hire me if he’d told his staff. But she’d probably pass along whatever response I gave, so I made myself smile and say, “We’ll see.”

She rolled her eyes. “If you think he’s going to feel bad because you look so pathetic–”

“I don’t think that.”

You can see that I did make additional changes as I typed in the corrections, adding a few short sentences and reorganizing some words. I view the typing stage as one more chance to make the book shine.

This book’s edit took me about seven weeks (I work Monday-Friday) and I did about ten pages a day. It’s tiring, and occasionally frustrating when the right word just won’t come to mind, but it’s important. This is a tough industry, and you don’t want to send out your book with any rough edges that might bother agents and editors. If you choose to self-publish instead, you still need a thoroughly edited book written to the highest standard you can reach, because readers deserve that. Put in the time and you’ll be amazed at how wonderful your book can be!

Guest Post by Author Karen White

THE INVISIBLE WOMAN

Not too long ago, I was driving in my convertible with the top down (and my little dog in his car seat in the back seat) and a large hawk appeared from out of nowhere, approaching at a ‘v’ trajectory until wham!—he hit the side passenger door. I was stunned (as was my dog—although I believe he was a little relieved, too, that the hawk hadn’t made it inside the car). Despite the damage to my car and the attempt on my dog’s life, the most upsetting thing about the whole incident was that I must have appeared invisible. To a hawk. Isn’t there an expression “eyes like a hawk”??
I usually wouldn’t be so paranoid except for the fact that it keeps happening! I recently made a drastic change to my hair color. My hairdresser loved it, I loved it and when I got home…nothing. My husband didn’t say anything. My children didn’t say anything. My dog remained silent, too, the traitor.
And then it was everywhere—at four-way stops people would proceed through the intersection as if I wasn’t there. Was it my imagination, or were people not responding to my emails as quickly as they used to? And why did my husband wait until bedtime to let me know that I had a smear of toothpaste on my forehead—something I’d apparently had on my face all day, including the time spent sitting across from him at the dinner table?
So where am I going with this and how does it relate to my writing (besides giving me tons of material to work with for future novels)? Basically, it’s justification for my answer to the question, “Do you ever bring your family with you on book tour or other book events?” In a word, “no.”
In a few weeks, I will be speaking in front of about 650 readers in another city as part of my book tour for my November release, FALLING HOME. I’m also booked to speak with lots of book clubs, do magazine, television and radio interviews, and appear at quite a few bookstores where I’ll meet and chat with readers who actually believe that I’m interesting enough to make them want to leave the comfort of their houses to come meet me! In other words, I will be basking in being visible.
I guess I’m admitting to living a double life. In one, I’m a mild-mannered housewife who carpools, drags recalcitrant children to hair and dental appointments, and does so much laundry I’m thinking of moving my desk into the laundry room. In that life, the people I live with (husband, two children, dog) are vaguely aware that I have some kind of hobby that has something to do with books. Their main concern is that they have clean underwear when they need it.
In my second life, I’m a sort-of celebrity who sometimes gets recognized in malls and cruise ships (yes, that’s happened twice), and whose books have appeared on the New York Times bestseller list. I actually get paid to speak, and have even been known to have a captive audience of several hundred laugh at my jokes! Booksellers are happy to meet me and invite me to their stores to come speak and sign my books and I get to stay in some really cool hotels with spas. I’m never even expected to be within 300 feet of a laundry room!
So, really, why would I want to mix the two? I actually enjoy being visible. Meeting booksellers and readers is one of the best parts of my job, as is getting to dress up like a girl and wear heels and makeup. I could do that all day—if only I didn’t have to actually spend time writing. 
To be honest, though, it’s also always good to come home; to sleep in familiar sheets, to pull on my favorite sweats, and curl up in my writing chair with my dog and favorite coffee mug. Occasionally, my children and husband actually notice me and say something nice (usually as a precursor for a request for money or clean socks, but still) and they’ll even include me on fun family vacations!
I have to admit that my two lives coexist happily in my head, and I can’t imagine my life without both. One allows me to follow my dream of writing books, and the other allows me to share them with readers. I love them both, and I hope I’m lucky enough to live this double life for a long time. Or at least until my family finds a way to get dirty laundry to me when I’m on book tour.

Interview with Sibel Hodge

Q: When did you realize you were first interested in writing?

I’ve always loved writing since I was a kid. I used to be scribbling stories down all the time. But when I left school I was too busy trying to get a job, we didn’t have any guidance about pursuing writing as an actual career. And then later, I was too busy trying to pay the mortgage to actually have the time and opportunity to pursue writing as a career. But a few years ago I moved from the UK to North Cyprus, and that’s when I finally had the chance to seriously devote to my passion.

Q: How would you describe your first novel, Fourteen Days Later, in 20 words or less?

A fun-packed romantic comedy that proves anything is possible if you take a chance.

Q: I read that your second novel, The Fashion Police, is the first in a series with the character Amber Fox. When you first thought of the idea for The Fashion Police, did you know right away you wanted it to be a series?

Yes, I wanted to write a comedy mystery series so that readers can get invested in the characters and see how they grow with each novel.

Q: What was the most difficult part of the writing process for you?

Plotting. I hate it! Give me a character to make up or dialogue to write and I’m loving it, but plotting is my pet hate. Unfortunately it’s a necessary evil. No plot means no story.

Q: What are you currently reading?

Take the Monkeys and Run – a cozy mystery by Karen Cantwell.

Q: What are your thoughts on e-books? How about self-publishing for writers?

It’s funny, because if someone had said thirty years ago that people would be reading their books on a little hand held computer that could hold thousands of books, they would have carted you off to the funny farm! But I think e-books are the future of publishing. They are hugely popular in the US now and they’ve change how people read. Alot of owners of e-readers say they read more than ever now because of the ease and availability of it.

The e-book revolution has really enabled some fantastic writers to indie publish, whereas with traditional publishing they wouldn’t have had a chance. There are some indie authors out there becoming very successful – look at JA Konrath and Amanda Hocking, for example. But with traditional publishing, a book could be fantastically written, have a great plot and characters, but wouldn’t be accepted by a major publisher unless it was going to be a bestseller. And that’s been compounded by the current global recession. So self-publishing gives authors that chance to get their work out there, and readers now have more choice than ever. It’s a win-win situation for everyone.

Q: You are not only a writer, but a fitness trainer, massage therapist, and you freelance write on health and fitness. First off, where do you find the time for it all?

That’s the hard bit. I wish there was more time in the day. Especially now with the expanse of social media as well ¬- Facebook, Twitter, blogs – it’s hard cramming everything in. Really you should try and avoid spreading yourself too thin and concentrate on good quality blogging and writing rather than quantity.

Q: Why is health and fitness so important to you?

I suffer from fybromyalgia, so for me exercise is essential to keep the condition under some sort of control and help with the pain.

Q: What would be your best advice for aspiring writers?

Keep writing! Being a writer isn’t easy, but with the growing e-book industry, it’s now much easier for new writers. Querying traditional agents and publishers takes up a lot of time, and you have to be prepared for a lot of rejections – even JK Rowling received rejections in her time – so you need to have a thick skin. When you think you’re work is ready for the public, I would recommend getting it critiqued by other authors or literary consultants so it’s in tip-top shape. And don’t forget to read. Being an author is as much about reading as it is about writing.

Q: Where would be your dream vacation?

Ooh, that’s a hard one! At the moment, I’d love a relxing beach holiday somewhere in the carribean. But I’d love to go and travel round Australia one day. Maybe if I ever hit the bestseller list!

Interview with Carla Neggers

Q: When did you decide to get serious about writing?

I’ve always been serious in the sense that I’ve always been dedicated to writing the best book I can — even when I was eleven and climbed a tree with pad and pen! I entered college as a music major but graduated with a degree in journalism. After college, I freelanced and kept writing fiction. I finished a manuscript and finally got up the courage to submit a query letter to a New York literary agent. That was a big step! She took me on, and now here I am.

Q: You have over fifty novels published! Where does the inspiration for your stories keep coming from?

I’ve asked myself this, too, and I think coming up with new stories is a natural, intuitive process for me. I don’t have to hunt up ideas so that I can write. I write because I have ideas! For example, I was on vacation in Ireland a few years ago. No writing! But we visited a stone ruin and an ancient stone circle…and next thing I knew, I had a stories and characters percolating that eventually became THE ANGEL, THE MIST and THE WHISPER.

Q: Can you describe your latest novel, Cold Dawn, in twenty words or less?

Okay, let me give this a shot: A search-and-rescue expert and a smokejumper go after a deadly serial arsonist who strikes the small Vermont town of Black Falls. How’s that?

Q: Do you have a certain writing schedule you stick to?

Yes and no. I write most days and work hard, but I’m not regimented. I don’t write X number of pages a day or work X number of hours. What I get done and how long it takes depends on where I am in the book. At the beginning of a book, I tend to work more in fits and starts. I need little breaks for the story to meander and then settle. Toward the end of a book, I’ll write for longer periods at a stretch.

Q: What are you currently reading?

I just re-read the last 100 pages of MJ Rose’s THE HYPNOTIST. Fascinating book!

Q: What are your thoughts on the rise of technology for the writing industry- e-readers and self-publishing?

It’ll be what it’ll be. I love to write and I love to read, and that’s not going to change.

Q: When writing, do you often start from Chapter 1, or do you work backwards, or start somewhere in the middle?

Chapter 1, but I’ll jot down scenes or snippets of scenes that occur to me as I write. Sometimes I’ll start in on Chapter 1 with no synopsis, just to get a feel for the story; other times I’ll have a brief synopsis before I start.

Q: Are you currently working on a project?

Yes, I am. I’m deep into my latest work-in-progress. It’s a brand-new world, and I can’t wait to tell you more about it!

Q: You have been to some amazing locations around the world. Where is your favorite place to vacation?

My husband and I adore the southwest Irish coast. We stay in the pretty village of Kenmare and wander the hills of the Iveragh and Beara peninsulas. Stunning scenery, great food, wonderful people. Just love it there!

Q: What is your advice for aspiring writers?

Write what you’re driven and love to write, but don’t postpone happiness until you achieve a certain goal. Be happy now! It’s too easy to say to yourself, “I’ll be happy when I finish a book.” Then it’ll be, “I’ll be happy when I’ve sold a book.” Then…”I’ll be happy when I make the bestseller lists.” Then…see how it works? It’s corrosive. Focus on writing the best book you can and living your life. Easier said than done some days, but,, FWIW, that’s my advice.