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Chick Lit Author: Christina Skye

Christina Skye has published over 20 novels and appeared on both the USA Today and New York Times best-seller lists. She has written both contemporary women’s fiction and historicals, all featuring her signature strong, stubborn females and tough male characters. Her contemporary novels often feature romantic, suspenseful plots with military or police themes. Her CODE NAME: series all feature strong women paired up with a Navy SEAL, filled with suspense, humor, and passion.
Skye has also received her doctorate in classical Chinese literature, and has written five
internationally acclaimed art and cultural guides to China while also working
as a consultant to the National Geographic Society and the American Museum
of Natural History. She enjoys off-roading with her motorcycle, shooting firearms, and hiking mountains.
Christina Skye’s chick lit titles are: My Spy, Hot Pursuit, Going Overboard, 2000 Kisses, CODE NAME: Nanny, CODE NAME: Princess, CODE NAME: Baby, and CODE NAME: Blondie.

Interview with Carole Matthews

Q: I read that you never had the thought to be a writer. What changed your mind?
I fell into it completely by accident. Years ago I worked for a television programme presenting a feature on aromatherapy and started to write my own scripts. Then I progressed to articles about aromatherapy for whatever magazine would take it. I also happened to be getting a magazine called Writers’ News which had both market leads for freelancers and also short story competitions. I entered their annual love story competition and, to my amazement, won. Instead of blowing the money on shoes and handbags, I spent it on a writing course. As the course approached, I thought I’d better write something to take with me and started my first novel. The course tutor read it and loved it. She recommended an agent and he took me on straight away. He sold the book a week later. That book became my first published novel – Let’s Meet on Platform 8.
Q: What is your favorite part of the writing process?
I enjoy all of it – research, planning, creating the characters. There’s no better way to spend a working day.
Q: Do you have a favorite book or author?
The Time Traveller’s Wife by Audrey Niffenegger. I love this book and wish I’d written it. I still can’t bring myself to see the film in case I’m disappointed.
Q: Where do your ideas for your story lines or characters come from?
Generally, from life, magazines, newspapers, stories that people tell you. There are stories all around just waiting to be told. I’m a great collector of anecdotes.
Q: Are any of your characters based on perhaps you or people you know?
Not really. You need to know your characters far more than you would a person, but you can sometimes pinch quirks or features from real people. Having said that, I’m way too much like my own heroines!
Q: I just finished reading With or Without You and I loved it! Did you do research in the Himalayas to write this novel?
This is one of my own personal favourites too. Yes, we did go to the Himalayas. The idea for this book started when I first met my partner, Lovely Kev who makes Indiana Jones look like a sloth. For our second holiday together he booked a three-week camping trek in the Himalayas. I am a five-star hotel kind of woman. All my friends were panicking about how I was going to manage and I was training by jogging on a treadmill in my garage with a backpack full of tinned soup. That gave me the idea for the story.
Q: Can you pick one of your novels that you can say would be your favorite? Or the one that you had the most fun writing or researching?
Continuing the trekking theme, part of my latest book – It’s Now or Never – features my heroine setting out on the Inca Trail in Peru. The book I’m currently writing is set partly in the Maasai Mara in Kenya on a game safari. It’s nice to be able to feature a few exotic locations in the books.
Q: What do you love the most about being a writer? Any fabulous perks you can tell us about?
Strangely, for a profession that consists mainly of me sitting in a room on my own, I like meeting my readers most of all. That’s probably why I spend huge amounts of time on Facebook too! It’s not just a marvelous work avoidance technique!
One fabulous perk is – again – down to my readers. After writing The Chocolate Lovers’ Club and The Chocolate Lovers’ Diet my readers like to send me gifts of chocolate. Receiving chocolate in the post on a regular basis is a good thing.
Q: How long does it usually take you to complete writing a book, from start to finish?
I’m contracted to do two books a year, so I need to squeeze one into six months.
Q: What would be your advice to aspiring writers?
Enjoy your writing. Too many people that I meet on workshops seem to struggle and wrestle and fight with their writing. Relax and let it flow. If you can’t think of anything to write about, then do some crazy things to get your creative juices flowing .
Q: What is or would be your favorite place to travel?
You know, I’ve been lucky to go to so many different countries that it would be hard to pick a favourite. Somewhere very special was the Galapagos Islands – followed closely by Nepal, China and the Maasai Mara takes some beating. Being just a few feet away from a wild male lion is something that I won’t forget in a hurry.

Chick Lit Author: Janice Kaplan

Janice Kaplan holds many titles, among them include: writer, television producer, and magazine editor. Kaplan began her career as an on-air sports reporter for CBS Radio, and then moved on to be a producer at ABC-TV’s Good Morning America, where she won awards for investigative reporting. She was also a columnist at Seventeen magazine and contributing editor at Vogue. Kaplan graduated from Yale University and won Yale’s Murray Fellowship for writing.
Janice Kaplan is the author and co-author of 11 books, including the chick lit titles The Botox Diaries, The Men I Didn’t Marry, and Mine Are Spectacular!. She currently lives in Larchmont, New York with her husband and has two sons attending Yale.

Chick Lit Author: Jen Lancaster

Then, she was laid off from the wonderful, high paying job that kept her highlights glowing. And carrying her Prada bag into the unemployment office didn’t help her out at all. Neither did applying for 300 jobs in a few short weeks. The economy was suffering after 9/11, and that is apparent to Lancaster after one whole year of being unemployed. Another blow- husband Fletch is laid off. After having to give up the penthouse, the salon, and most of her designer labels, Lancaster decided to start a website to vent about her unemployment state. The site quickly gained followers and popularity.
After having to continually borrow money from her parents to keep up with rent and groceries, Fletch finally got a job and Lancaster decided to take some time off from her temp jobs to focus on writing. Her website made her realize that she just may be good at it. After landing a literacy agent, Lancaster’s first essay is published. Soon after that, her first novel, Bitter is the New Black, is published.
Jen Lancaster’s published titles are: Bitter Is the New Black, Bright Lights, Big Ass, Such a Pretty Fat, and Pretty in Plaid.

Chick Lit Author: Carole Matthews

Carole Matthews was born in St. Helens, Merseyside, and became an avid reader as a young girl. She had many career dreams- being a teacher, travel guide, hairdresser, but never thought of being a writer. She moved to London from Liverpool and worked a flurry of unsatisfying jobs- secretary, shop assistant, ice cream lady, and had the first thought of writing a book about her experiences when she was working at a mad holistic clinic. Though she never got around to writing that book, she did enter a short story competition for a magazine- and won! She used her winning money on taking a writing course, fell in love with everything about it, got an agent, and sold her first book- Let’s Meet on Platform 8- a week later.
Now, Carole Matthews is an international bestselling author, appearing on the Sunday Times and USA Today bestseller lists. She has won multiple awards, and her books have been published in 24 countries. Her titles include: The Chocolate Lover’s Club, Welcome to the Real World, With or Without You, More to Life Than This, A Minor Indiscretion, Let’s Meet on Platform 8, The Sweetest Taboo, The Scent of Scandal, Bare Necessity, For Better for Worse, Girls Night In, and Girls Night Out.

Chick Lit Author: Kasey Michaels

Kasey Michaels is a New York Times and USA Today best selling author with over 100 titles published. She has written Regency romances, Regency historicals, category books including novellas and continuities and a few series “launch” books, and single title contemporaries.

Michaels began writing when her eldest son was 8 years old, and suffered kidney failure. She was surrounded by sick children, including her own, and she noticed that many of the hospital nurses and other mothers would read romance novels, a way for them to escape the realities. She had written her first book, The Belligerent Miss Boynton, before her sons kidney failure, with little thought to making it a career. Her second book, The Tenacious Miss Tamerlane, was written over the course of 9 months while her son waited for his first transplant. After that second book, her writing career began to take off. Michaels says that she has learned “that one of the best ways to keep your sanity is to escape reality every once in a while.”

Some of Kasey Michael’s popular chick lit titles include: Too Good to Be True, Love to Love You Baby, Be My Baby Tonight, This Must Be Love, and This Can’t Be Love. Please visit Michael’s official website for the complete list of her titles.

Emily Giffin’s Something Borrowed Closer to Production

Emily Giffin’s novel Something Borrowed is getting closer to production! Luke Greenfield has signed on as director of the romance novel that will be coming to a theater near you. Greenfield has produced big name films such as “The Girl Next Door” and “Role Model’s” and will be joined by Wild Ocean Film’s Aaron Lubin and Pamela Schein as producers. Alcon Entertainment will produce the film (which will keep the novel’s title of Something Borrowed) and will bring along big names such as Andrew Kosove, Broderick Johnson, Molly Smith, and Hilary Swank. Jennie Urman penned the screenplay.

Chick Lit Author Maggie Marr

Maggie Marr, author of the celebrity ridden, Hollywood gossip novels Hollywood Girls Club and Secrets of the Hollywood Girls Club didn’t start out in the depths of the plush L.A. lifestyle. She grew up in Illinois, practiced law for four years- first as a guardian-ad-litem for abused children in Chicago and then as a prosecutor in domestic violence in Denver. After that, Marr moved to Los Angeles with her husband, an actor, and began her first job in the entertainment industry- pushing a mail cart at ICM. The pushing paid off, as she later became a motion picture literacy agent.
Marr now splits her time between producing and writing. Her two published titles are Hollywood Girls Club and Secrets of the Hollywood Girls Club. She also finished her most recent television pilot My Mr. Universe. Maggie Marr is currently working on a contemporary romance and a new motion picture script.

Interview with Charlotte Ward

What is your favorite part of the writing process?
Probably the moment when you begin to feel you’re getting somewhere. It’s always a relief when it starts to flow after a period of writer’s block or when you know you are at the point where the book is beginning to take shape. Seeing your work in a finished tangible form with a pretty, shiny cover is amazing too.
How did you decide on this career path?
I started off being really interested in broadcasting but when I went to college to study journalism and radio I found that I much preferred the print side. I had a great teacher called Barbara Jones who inspired me. She’d bundle us into the college minibus and drive to Hugh Grant and Liz Hurley’s house so we could ask them for interviews, she’d arrange trips to places like the Houses of Parliament or BBC HQ and once took us to Glastonbury so we could grill Michael Eavis about the festival. She gave us a real glimpse of what a job in journalism would be like.
Who has been your favourite celebrity so far to interview?
Honor Blackman was amazing – she’s such a cool lady. I also loved Julie Walters when I interviewed her. Claudia Winkleman is very, very funny as is Laurence Llewelyn Bowen who will answer anything you ask him with complete candidness. He’s brilliant.
And, who is the one celebrity you haven’t yet interviewed but would love the chance to?
Well Oprah Winfrey would be a good one at the moment seeing as she has just quit her chat show, or for my own guilty pleasure – Robert Pattinson. I used to love Orlando now I’m swooning over Rob. It’s a bit sad for a woman over 30 but there you go.
You’ve said that Why Am I Always The One Before ‘The One?’ is based on you and your friends searching for, well, ‘The One.’ How much fun did you have writing this book?
Lots! There were loads of funny moments down the pub as my friends told me their stories and I’d be frantically scribbling them down on a napkin. I think it made us all see that you don’t have to be ashamed of your dating disaster stories. Infatuated people do silly things and life would be very boring if we didn’t. It was lovely to have my friends contributing and there was a shared sense of excitement when that book came out.
On the other hand, how difficult was it to write about the ‘ridiculous and deranged’ situations that you have experienced firsthand?
It was hard at first because if I’m honest I did feel like a bit of a wally. I’d be cringing, thinking, “Oh Jeez, did I really do that? Do I actually want to tell people?” But after a while I decided, “Oh sod it, if I can laugh about it then it’s not that bad.” Now I feel fine about my deranged moments as putting them out there in print for other people to enjoy has been quite cathartic. I’m a fool for love and proud so I did it all over again for ‘It’s Not Me, It’s You.’
You are currently ghostwriting a book, how much do you enjoy this experience?
I really enjoy it. I’m fascinated by other people’s stories. It’s an odd process though. As the deadline looms it often gets to the point where you are speaking to the person you are writing for more than anyone else in your life and vice versa. It becomes this strange intense relationship. When I’m going through an extreme ghostwriting period I can hear their voice in my head as I type and my dreams are all messed up and confused. I haven’t called my boyfriend someone else’s name in my sleep yet but it’s a distinct possibility.
What would be your advice for aspiring authors and journalists?
There’s no point pursuing a writing career unless you really are going to give it 110 per cent. You have to really want it and be prepared to do lots of unpaid work experience (including strange ‘journalism’ duties like tea runs and cleaning out cupboards) take lots of knocks and keep on plodding away for a pathetic amount of money. At the moment it’s more competitive than ever. However if it really is your dream then motivation, drive and initiative will get you far. If you want to be a journalist then get as much on-the-job experience as you can and offer up stories to your local newspaper so they can see you are keen and have a good news sense. If you want to get a book deal, write a blog and make sure you have at least four chapters written and clear chapter outlines for the rest of the book. Get hold of a copy of The Writer’s Handbook and seek out a literary agent who can give you advice on structure or plot and will have the publishing contacts to get your manuscript seen by the right people. Also, don’t give up if you are rejected at first – even JK Rowling was turned down numerous times before she had her success with Harry Potter.
You seem very busy with all the different projects you take part in, how do you fit in time for yourself?
I’m a bit rubbish at that and often seem to work seven days a week. It’s the drawback of working from home – there’s no clear structure to when you start and finish work, but I do try to take a break. When exhaustion hits me I’ll go home to my parents and cuddle up in front of the fire with my dog and cats. After three days my dad will say, “That’s better Charlotte, you’ve got some colour back in your cheeks!”
When you get some free time, how do you spend it?
Reading other people’s books, watching X Factor, True Blood and Lost, going to the cinema, seeing my friends, indulging in determined periods of gluttony then crying in TopShop changing rooms, cooing over animals at the zoo, going for nice walks or giving my credit card a battering.
What would be or is your favorite place to travel?
In terms of future destinations I really want to go to New Zealand. I have family out there so a visit is definitely on my wish list. For the last three summers I’ve been island hopping in Greece. It’s great as all you need to do is book a flight to Athens, go straight to the port and jump on a boat to an island of your choice. There are always loads of people waiting at the island ports with holiday apartments to let so you can book on the day and pick and choose at leisure. The weather is roasting, the beaches are gorgeous and there are about a million feral kittens roaming about which I like to stop, look at and take photos of. My boyfriend is very patient.