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Author Profile: Isabel Wolff

Author Name: Isabel Wolff

Website: http://www.isabelwolff.com/index.html
Bio: I was born in Warwickshire, read English at Cambridge and after spells in the theatre and in advertising, I got a job at the BBC. I had twelve very happy years at BBC World Service radio where I was a producer and reporter in the Features department and in Current Affairs. I travelled widely compiling documentaries in Central America, Australia, Africa and the Far East. I also wrote freelance articles for magazines and newspapers such as The Spectator, the Evening Standard, the Independent and the Daily Telegraph who, in 1997, commissioned me to write a comic, girl-about-town column, Tiffany Trott. Within a month of the first column appearing I’d been signed up by HarperCollins to turn Tiffany’s adventures into a book. To my amazement HarperCollins then said they’d like another book, and another, and so somehow, without having set out to be a novelist, here I am.
Currently: Isabel currently lives in London with her partner Greg and their two children, Alice and Edmund. She is working on her ninth novel, due out in 2011.
Titles: The Trials of Tiffany Trott, Making Minty Malone, Out of the Blue, Rescuing Rose, Behaving Badly, and A Vintage Affair.

Bio Retrieved from isabelwolff.com

10 Tips for Aspiring Authors by Chantel Simmons

10 Tips for Aspiring Authors
1. Only you can write your book. Writing is a job, and you’re not going to make a living at being a writer unless you treat it like a job. You could watch TV, go to a movie, or go for manicures with your best friend. There’s always going to be something else you could do instead of writing, and while all those other activities are fun, no one’s going to write your book for you while you’re doing them. So while you’re trying to write your book, try to actually sit down and write.
2. Set goals. Set a deadline to finish writing the book, then set mini-goals, such as “Finish Chapter 5 by the end of the month” or “Write 1,000 words a week.” Then comes the fun part: make a list of rewards and whenever you meet a goal, reward yourself. Go to a movie with a friend or get a manicure. You’ll enjoy it that much more knowing you worked hard for it. And you won’t feel guilty that you should be home writing for those few hours.
3. Practice, practice, practice. It takes 10,000 hours to become good at anything, so if you want to write a good book, then get writing. It takes 30 days to make a habit, so try to write every day, even if it’s only for 10 minutes or 10 words. Eventually, it’ll become a habit and those 10 words will turn into 10 pages. And when you miss a day of writing, you’ll feel so guilty you’ll ensure you don’t miss the next day.
4. Don’t believe in writer’s block. If you’re stuck on a scene, skip it and write the next scene. Chances are, if you aren’t excited to write a scene, it probably won’t be a very good one to read, either, so just move on. If you feel certain there are plot points you needed to get across in that troublesome scene, jot them on a Post-it and stick it to your computer scene. You’ll find another place to work them into the story.
5. Schedule in your writing time. Then stick to it. You wouldn’t miss a doctor’s appointment to make cookies or do the laundry, so don’t skip an hour of writing to do it either.
6. Don’t quit your day job. If you sell the proposal for your book for a million dollars, well, then, sure, ignore my advice and quit your day job. But if you’re working on your first novel and you don’t have an agent, let alone a publisher, keep your day job—or at least do something else that gives your day some structure and brings in some money. Being unemployed and poor can be stressful. And stress isn’t usually one of the key qualities that inspire you to write a good novel.
7. Believe in yourself. No one is going to care as much about your book or your career as a writer as you do. You have to be your own biggest cheerleader. Of course, make sure that all your rah-rah cheering is warranted. Keep trying to get your book published for as long as you believe that it’s the best book you can possibly write. When you stop believing your book is your absolute best work ever, move on. Revise it or start writing a new book. Lots of successful, published writers have unpublished manuscripts sitting in drawers. You won’t be alone so don’t worry about it.
8. Have a plan. I like to plot out each chapter before I start writing. It’s just a few points, but this way, if I don’t feel like writing Chapter 2, I can skip ahead to Chapter 6. If that’s too planned out, try jotting down your opening chapter, your source of conflict, the climax and the closing sentence. If you know those key elements, you’re going to be a lot better off than if you just sit down and write random scenes and then hope they all fit together in the end. There’s a very good chance you’ll end up scrapping half your work. (Of course, there’s nothing wrong with just letting the words flow—it all works toward the 10,000 hours—it just means it will take a lot longer to finish that first book).
9. Ask friends to read your book. Four eyes are better than two. Twenty opinions are better than none. You don’t have to incorporate everybody’s suggestions, but you never know when someone might make a suggestion that you think is a good one—and that will you’re your book that much stronger. And if 10 people have the same negative criticism about a plot point or a character, chances are an editor, an agent or readers might think the same thing. Isn’t it better to get that opinion free when you can still fix the problem than in a rejection letter or in a published book review?
10. Never give up. If every agent ignores you, follow up. If they all reject your book, compile a new list of agents and send the book out again. If every editor passes on your book, revise it and send to new editors. All you need is one person to say yes, so don’t get discouraged about the ones who don’t. Success is 99% hard work and 1% luck. If this is your dream, it’ll be that much sweeter if you have to work hard to realize it.

Chantel Simmons is the bestselling author of two novels – Stuck in Downward Dog and Love Struck. Read Chantel’s blog at www.chantelsimmons.com or tweet with her on twitter.com@chantelsimmons

Author Profile: Grace Coopersmith

Author: Grace Coopersmith
Website: http://www.gracecoopersmith.com/
Titles: Nancy’s Theory of Style
Bio: I’m a San Francisco Bay Area native and still live there. I went to Stanford, where I studied creative writing, literature, and theatre. (I had a mad idea that I wanted to be a theatre reviewer. Anyway…)
With this extremely useful ability to sit around and read books and talk about them, I took miscellaneous low-paying jobs. I frequently worked for non-profits, including theatre companies. One of my job skills was properly opening a bottle of champagne for special guests. I also learned to forge signatures and mimic my bosses’ writing styles. I can’t remember if I put those skills on my resume, but I used to see my counterfeit letters framed and displayed by proud recipients.
I was a frequent contributor of home, gardening, and style columns and features for newspapers and magazines. So, yes, I have written in-depth articles about modern wallpaper trends, worm composting, and luxury home libraries.
Right now, I’m working on another novel set in San Francisco.
Under my own name, Marta Acosta, I write the Casa Dracula series. Haunted Honeymoon (Simon & Schuster/Gallery) will be released in October 2010. You see, I even counterfeit myself.
Bio Retrieved from http://www.gracecoopersmith.com/

Interview with Robyn Harding

Q: When did you know you wanted to be a writer?

I was about twelve years old when I read The Outsiders. I was so inspired that S.E. Hinton had written the book when she was only 15! And when I say I was inspired, I mean that I basically wanted to copy her. (But I would be even more impressive because I was only 13.) So, I started my own novel about a bunch of parentless boys who smoked and fought and took too many aspirins. I even tried to give them cool names like Pony Boy and Soda Pop. (I can’t remember all the characters but my protagonist’s name was Brewster.) Unfortunately, I lost interest in Brewster’s saga on about page 9, but that’s when I knew… I wanted to be a writer.

Q: Your first novel is titled The Journal of Mortifying Moments. Where did you get the idea to write this?

I wanted to write about the disastrous relationships we all have when we’re young and insecure and how, when we look back through a window of time and distance, we can see the humor in them. So I decided to have my character, a woman in her early-thirties, keep a journal about her past dating disasters. She’d write about all the humiliating and hilarious experiences she’d had with men during high school, college, and in her twenties. But then I thought, “Why on earth would someone write all that down?” That’s when I came up with the idea to have her therapist suggest the journal as a tool to work on her current relationship… And the journal of mortifying moments was born.

Q: Do you have a certain writing routine you stick to (writing so many hours a day, anything like that?)

I have two kids so I’ve had to develop a writing routine around them. I take them to school and then I sit down to write. Over the years, I’ve realized that my most creative time is in the morning, so I try to protect those three or four hours. In the afternoon, I’m kind of burned out and writing is more of a struggle. (And in the evening, I’m practically brain dead, lying on the couch, drooling and watching Bachelor Pad.) In the summer, when the kids are on vacation, I get up early and write. Lucky for me, they like to sleep in, so I can usually get an hour or two in before they’re up.

Q: What do you think is the hardest part when you are editing your own work?

I find that if I can step away from a project for a week or more, I can go back to my manuscript with fresh eyes. Suddenly, all the problems are so glaringly obvious. The difficulty is in the walking away. Sometimes deadlines won’t allow it. And sometimes, I feel an almost compulsive need to tweak it… and tweak it and tweak it.

Q: Your latest novel, Chronicles of a Midlife Crisis, is due out in September and covers both the male and female perspective after a breakup. Where did the inspiration for this idea come from?

I wanted to challenge myself and try writing in a different voice. I’d been developing a screenplay with a male protagonist, so I was in that male headspace already. I decided to write from a male, first person point of view. Also, I’d always found it funny how two people can view the same situation so differently – especially a man and a woman.

Q: How were you able to get a man’s perspective on how he feels and behaves after a breakup?

I went back and looked at my past break ups. In my experience, men tend to get over relationships quickly – at least on the surface. Women are more likely to cry and pine and grieve for months. Men look like they’ve moved on – within a few weeks, they’re dating, partying and socializing. But eventually, they crack. Because they haven’t dealt with the loss of the relationship, they end up on the phone saying, “We were so good together. Will you take me back?” In “Chronicles of a Midlife Crisis”, Trent feels trapped in a lifeless marriage. But when single life throws him a wicked curve ball, he’s desperate to hit the rewind button.

Q: What was your biggest challenge while writing Chronicles?

It was the authenticity of the male voice. I really had to get into that headspace. My husband was a great help. I’d get him to read over chapters that were from Trent’s point of view. My husband would suggest things like: “Instead of ‘ I have to pee’… Say ‘I need to take a piss’.”

Q: What is one personal goal you would like to achieve by the end of the year?

“Chronicles of a Midlife Crisis” has been optioned for a television series. I’ve worked really hard on a pilot and a pitch document, and it’s being submitted soon. I would really love to see something happen with it by the end of the year.

Q: What book(s) are you reading right now?

This is going to sound so pretentious, but I’m reading “Tess of the D’Urbervilles” by Thomas Hardy. I was rereading “A Prayer for Owen Meany” and John Irving references “Tess…” so often. I realized that I’d never read it and probably should. But before that, I read a fun novel called “One Day” by David Nicholls.

Q: What is your advice for aspiring writers?

Write it, polish it, and submit it. I didn’t have any insider connections and I managed to secure an agent and get published. Agents really are looking for something fresh and new and exciting – and that just might be you. But you also have to know when to quit. If you’ve submitted a manuscript and it’s consistently rejected, move on. Write something else. Write it, polish it, and submit it.

Q: Where would be your dream vacation?

I’d like to rent a house with my family in the south of France for the entire summer. From there, we could take short trips into Italy and Spain. My kids speak French (I speak a little, my husband speaks none) so they’d have to do all the talking.

Author Profile: Lindsey Kelk

Author Name: Lindsey Kelk

Website: http://www.iheartnewyork.co.uk/lindseykelk
Bio: Lindsey Kelk is a British writer and children’s book editor. When she isn’t writing, reading, listening to music or watching more TV than is healthy, Lindsey likes to wear shoes, shop for shoes and judge the shoes of others. She loves living in New York but misses Sherbert Fountains, London and drinking Gin & Elderflower cocktails with her friends. Not necessarily in that order..
Titles: I Heart Hollywood, I Heart Paris, and I Heart New York

Bio Retrieved from Iheartnewyork.co.uk

Author Profile: Tilly Bagshawe

Author Name: Tilly Bagshawe

Website: http://www.tillybagshawe.com/index.php
Bio: Tilly Bagshawe upset the nuns at her catholic girls’ boarding school by getting pregnant unexpectedly at seventeen. Expelled but undaunted, she gave birth to a beautiful daughter alone and went on to Cambridge University as a single mom, taking her baby with her. Tilly had a successful career in finance before fulfilling her dream of becoming a writer. Now married with two more children, she lives in Los Angeles and London. In addition to her bestselling novels, Tilly has contributed to numerous British newspapers and magazines including Cosmopolitan, Glamour, Elle, The Sunday Times, The Times and The Daily Mail.
Titles: Showdown, Adored, Do No Disturb, Scandalous, Flawless. She also has two titles published under Sidney Sheldon: Mistress of the Game, and After the Darkness.

Author Profile: Tonya Plank

Name: Tonya Plank
Website: http://www.tonyaplank.com/
Bio: Tonya Plank was born and raised in Phoenix, Arizona. She has a B.A. in English and Political Science from the University of Arizona, an M.A. in History from Brown University, and a J.D. from Rutgers Law School at Newark. She worked as an appellate public defender in New York City for many years. While practicing law full-time, she wrote her first novel (Swallow), which was published in December 2009. Swallow, an Amazon best-seller in legal fiction, received several awards, including a gold medal for best regional fiction in the 2010 Independent Publisher Awards (IPPYs), the gold medal for women’s fiction in the 2010 Living Now Book Awards, and was a finalist in the ForeWord Magazine Book of the Year Awards and the National Indie Excellence Awards. A former competitive ballroom dancer and a longtime balletomane, Tonya writes a dance blog, Swan Lake Samba Girl, which has been lauded by James Wolcott of Vanity Fair and Terry Teachout of the Wall Street Journal, and has been cited in those publications as well as the New York Times Arts Beat blog, the Washington Post, and CNN.com. The blog won a 2007 award from the Public Defender Network for best blog by a public defender that has nothing to do with the job. She also writes for the Huffington Post and several dance publications.
Currently: Tonya lives in New York and is working on her second novel, an urban / legal drama about a group of young men who witness a shooting from various perspectives.

Author Profile: Marla Martenson

Name: Marla Martenson
Website: http://www.marlamartenson.com/
Bio: Marla Martenson was born in Tacoma, Washington, the “City of Destiny.” She has a natural flair for acting and a deep interest in reading and writing poetry and short stories. At the age of sixteen, Marla was living in Iran with her family, learning to speak French and Persian, when the revolution forced their return to Washington State. After a year of college there, the pursuit of an acting career drew her to Hollywood and a stint in television commercials and print modeling.

Restless and eager for new challenges, in the early nineties it was on to Chicago, where she discovered that she could use her personal dating experiences to help others. She subsequently turned this talent into a career as a matchmaker back in Los Angeles, where, since 2001, her skills have led many couples to matrimony. Marla’s work inspires people and gives them hope that they can find their soul mates. She found and married her own, musician and composer Adolfo Jon Alexi, in Mexico City in 2002. A world traveler and culture nut, Marla describes herself as having a French flair, a Persian heart, Italian fire, and Mexican taste buds!

Currently, Marla writes for such online publications as www.naomishow.com, (www.abfabwomen.com) and Examiner (www.examiner.com). She was named the “Over 40 Female of the Week” in February, 2010, for Over40Females.com. She is also a correspondent for World Wide Good News.

Currently: Marla and Adolfo reside in blissful harmony in Los Angeles, where she continues to bring her considerable matchmaking expertise to bear on the single population of star-studded Southern California while her talented husband serenades them with his own songs and music.

Titles: Excuse Me, Your Soul Mate Is Waiting, Good Date, Bad Date, and Diary of a Beverly Hills Matchmaker.

Bio Retrieved from Marlamartenson.com

Author Profile: Rosy Thornton

Author Name: Rosy Thornton

Website: http://rosythornton.com/
Bio: Rosy is an author of contemporary fiction, published by Headline Review. Her novels could perhaps be described as romantic comedy with a touch of satire – or possibly social satire with a hint of romance. In real life she lectures in Law at the University of Cambridge, where she is a Fellow of Emmanuel College. She shares her home with her partner, two daughters and two lunatic spaniels.
Titles: Hearts and Minds, More Than Love Letters, Crossed Wires, and The Tapestry of Love.