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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: Robert Rave

Getting his start as a New York publicist working at one of the city’s most renowned firms, Robert Rave takes his behind-the-scenes view of the world of high-society and celebrity elite to set the stage for his light-hearted, witty literary adventures.

In his first novel, Spin, Rave chronicled the life of Taylor Green – a young corn fed publicist trying to make a name for himself in the cut-throat world of high-stakes PR. As Taylor finds himself in increasingly bizarre yet hilarious situations for the sake of his job, he is forced to weigh the fame and fortune he seeks against his own character and moral code. Dubbed “a Devil Wear’s Prada for straight guys” by Entertainment Weekly, Spin was acclaimed by critics as a must-have summer beach read, and established Rave as one-to-watch on the “chick-lit” scene.

On August 3rd Rave will release Waxed, an equally titillating novel which follows the Impresario sisters who run New York’s hottest waxing salon. Against the backdrop of this sexy yet taboo vocation, Rave tells a textured story of the three women as they struggle with relationships and strive for personal fulfillment. With equal parts wit, wisdom and humor, Rave layers in charming cameos by the many women (and men) who visit the salon, to deliver a thoroughly enjoyable read. Rave also launched www.youvebeenwaxed.com, a companion website to the novel. The site serves as a meeting place for women and men to share their often funny, and sometimes painful anecdotes of personal grooming.

Rave, recently named a Forty Under Forty by The Advocate, is also a regular contributor to the The Huffington Post. Rave currently resides in Los Angeles with his two French Bulldogs, Stanley and Freddy.

Interview with Wendy Wax

Samantha Robey
ChickLitPlus.com

Q: Why do you love writing?

I don’t think there’s anything more rewarding than having the opportunity to create characters and the worlds they inhabit out of nothing but imagination. It’s even more incredible when these characters and their lives become real and important to others.

The letters and emails from readers telling you how much they’ve enjoyed something you’ve written or complaining that you kept them up all night reading, are best of all.

Q: You have worked in radio, television, and film. If you had to pick one to have a career in one, which would it be and why?

I have a soft spot for radio, probably because that’s where I started. I began at the college station, moved into voice over commercial work, and did a stint in Tampa as the host of a live radio show called ‘Desperate & Dateless’ during a time when I was both!

I’m also drawn to radio because, like writing, it requires a lot of imagination and is more about what’s inside you than what you look like or how others perceive you.

One of my favorite college classes was an exploration of early radio. We used to listen to the old shows; the ones families used to tune into each week before television existed. I was fascinated by the visual images that were created just by using voice and sound effects.

There was a really great comedy routine where you could actually picture Lake Michigan being emptied and then turned into a gigantic hot fudge sundae. It ended with a plane dropping the maraschino cherry on top!

Q: What do you hope readers take from your books?

I hope they enjoy themselves; that for however long it takes them to read one of my books, they can leave real life behind and escape into people and places that interest them and they can relate to.

Q: How do you find fresh ideas for your characters?

I don’t know exactly where they come from. I’m a pretty instinctual writer and the kernels of story ideas come out of the headlines or things that I observe around me.

I write women’s journeys—stories about women discovering who they are and what they’re made of. My characters are often an amalgamation of women, or at least the kinds of women, that I know or have met.

Q: Is there anything that really surprised you about being an author or the writing industry in general? Maybe any good secrets or inside tidbits you can share?

I was certainly surprised by how brutal the publishing industry can be. There’s writing and then there’s getting and staying published, which are very different things.

The Accidental Bestseller, which was recently reprinted in mass market paperback, is definitely an inside look at the publishing industry. I’ve joked that ‘the names have been changed to protect the innocent,’ but it’s as true a look at what it is to be a writer today as I was able to write without having to label it non-fiction.

It’s the story of four critique partners who’ve been friends for a decade and who discover just how far they’re willing to go to help each other survive the industry.

It’s up for a Rita Award, which is really interesting since the book actually begins with one of the characters sitting at a very similar awards ceremony waiting to see whether she’s won a prestigious writing award that she hopes will revitalize her career. Of course, now I wish I’d written her winning!!

Q: What type of research do you conduct for your books?

Research comes in all different forms and in any given book there can be lots of different things you need to know and understand. In Leave It to Cleavage, I had to learn about the bra industry, beauty pageants, small town policing and some really interesting forensics issues.

I’ve also researched talk radio, advertising, divorce, construction, financial theft, politics and ballroom dance, just to name a few. It’s pretty much impossible to write a novel without needing to learn about things you don’t know, and I think it’s really important to understand what you’re writing about and get your facts straight. The more you know, the more realistic your scenes will be and the more authentic your characters feel.

Q: What was the best part about growing up in Florida?

The beach! I grew up on St. Pete Beach, which is that comma shaped barrier island on the west central coast of Florida that curves into the Gulf of Mexico. It’s still my favorite beach in the world and walking barefoot with the white sand squinched between my toes is the most relaxing thing ever. My current work in progress is actually set there, which is a lot of fun.

Q: When you were growing up, what did you think your career would be one day?

I’ve always loved to perform, and when I was little I just wanted to be famous—whatever that means!

Later I wanted to be a famous journalist or a famous stand up comedian. I’m not as worried about the famous part anymore—it is, after all, a pretty relative term. I feel really fortunate to get to make things up for a living.

Q: What is your advice for aspiring writers?

In The Accidental Bestseller each chapter begins with a quote about writing. I was originally looking for one to begin the book and found so many that resonated with me, that I used as many as I could.

As I mentioned earlier and wrote about in The Accidental Bestseller, it’s not an easy business. In addition to talent, the most important thing is probably persistence. Frankly, you have to really, really want it in order to hang in through all the ups and downs a writing career typically entails.

Chapter one begins with John Steinbeck’s quote, “The profession of book writing makes horse racing seem like a solid, stable business.” John was right!

Another that sums things up is from James Baldwin who said, “Beyond talent lie all the usual words: discipline, love, luck—but most of all, endurance.”

Q: Where would be your dream vacation?

On a white sandy beach, with the sound of the waves washing gently onto shore, reading—for as long as I wanted to without any interruptions. I’ve joked that I could read a book a day if my family would leave me alone long enough, and I’d like to put this theory to the test!

Because I love the beach so much and to celebrate the release of The Accidental Bestseller in mass market paperback, I’m running a contest for those lucky enough to get to one. Just take a picture of yourself reading a copy of The Accidental Bestseller on the beach—any beach— submit to my website www.authorwendywax.com I’ll post it on my facebook page http://www.facebook.com/authorwendywax ,
and enter you to win a beach bag full of my favorite books!

Chick Lit Author Bethany Maines

Bethany Maines is a native of Tacoma, Washington, and debuted her first novel Bulletproof Mascara in 2010. She enjoys traveling and teaching karate to children, and holds a third degree black belt in the martial arts. Her day job has her working as a graphic designer, but between her careers and hobbies, Maines is working on a sequel to Bulletproof Mascara.

Chick Lit Author Janet Gover

Janet Gover was born in Melbourne, Australia, and had two great loves as a child- ponies and books. She competed in horse shows, winning a handful or ribbons, but mainly riding more for work, herding cattle on horseback. Gover figured out how much she wanted to be a writer when she 12 years old, when she was instructed to write a short story for a homework assignment. She typed 20 pages and made a cardboard cover for her proud masterpiece. It was then she was hooked.

Gover studied at the University of Queensland, where she focused on journalism, sociology, and political science. She went on to be a general reporter, then a specialist crime reporter before getting into politics. In the 80’s Gover was introduced to a computer, and was hooked. She currently works as a consultant, implementing high end digital systems in TV stations and production facilities in Europe, Asia and the Middle East.

Janet Gover also is a novelist, with two novels published through Little Black Dress. Her first, The Farmer Needs a Wife was released in January of 2009, and The Bachelor and Spinster Ball was recently released. Her latest novel, Racer Girls, will be out in July 2010. She also writes short series that are often published in magazines.

Interview with Eva Pasco

Q: Why did you decide to start writing?

As you know, I never stopped writing since my childhood escapades on a pink Tom Thumb typewriter where my vivid imagination conjured mysteries and even my own espionage series. My writing merely took a turn for the practical in college and throughout my teaching career. I resumed writing creatively again because I became restless to find my own niche in the Second Act of Life like my protagonist Carla Matteo—art imitating life. I fell back on what came natural to me.

Q: What gave you the idea for your novel Underlying Notes?

A perfume aficionado, fragrance has always been an important thread weaving through my life. One day I stumbled upon an online perfume forum and registered. This membership escalated my curiosity about undiscovered fragrances to a frenzy, expanding my perfume collection discreetly stashed in cupboards and decorative boxes. Meanwhile, I grew tired of reading magazine articles about the exploits of middle aged women who took up roller blading, deep sea diving, or achieved mystical enlightenment by scaling mountains in Tibet—I’m serious! That’s when Carla Matteo stepped into my field of vision wafting insecurities, inhibitions, quirks, anxieties, and fears. I knew I wanted to tell a story about an ordinary woman with foibles, restless to find her own niche, parlaying a fragrance addiction to embark on an introspective journey of self-discovery.

Q: What did you find most difficult about writing?

Since Underlying Notes is my debut novel, the primary difficulty I had at first was accepting my own unconventional methodology. I don’t schedule a set time to write, and there can be a lapse of days before I resume where I left off, though I’m constantly incubating and fermenting ideas and dialog in my head. I would berate myself for working at the speed of a glacier—retreating to a previous paragraph for the purpose of editing and revising, then advancing a paragraph or two for the day. I constantly go back to the very beginning to keep every nuance fresh in my mind and to be sure all details fit together with precision. After completing my novel to satisfaction with very little editing required, I’ve not only accepted, but embraced this excruciating methodology which best suits my writing proclivities.

Q: On the other hand, what was your favorite part about writing?

By far my favorite aspect about writing is when words just spill onto a page with coherence, and the elusive word I’m looking for seems to present itself as a eureka moment. I also feel exhilarated and exonerated at the completion of each chapter because I’ve been able to fabricate a cohesive piece crucial to the story purely from the figment of my imagination.

Q: How did you take the news that your novel was being published?

To say I was “overjoyed” is an understatement. I did an awful lot of jumping up and down that day. When I eventually landed back on earth, reality hit. Publication is just the beginning of an author’s journey.

Q: Are you currently working on another book?

I am seven chapters into my next Chick Lit novel with a protagonist on the cusp of forty. The setting is a fictitious town in northern Rhode Island where local history plays a significant role in moving the plot forward.

Q: What do you enjoy doing in your down time?

Not privy to much down time, I do enjoy my morning workout lifting weights and hopping on the elliptical trainer in my office. I spend a considerable part of the day networking and writing ezine articles about Rhode Island. I also contribute weekly nostalgic memoirs and rambles to a Sixties site where I have my own profile page.

Q: What’s one of your favorite authors or books?

Though I’ve adhered to my own cardinal rule not to read books in the same genre I write so as not to unduly influence storyline or style, there is one author in particular who resonates with me—Anne Lamott, whose perfect wording exposes life’s imperfect moments.

Q: What would be your advice to aspiring authors?

I won’t be the first to dispense advice which must sound like a cliché: “Believe in your own merits as a storyteller.” This belief in yourself will enable you to persevere when you encounter setbacks.

Q: What is or do you think would be your favorite place to travel?

I’ve never been fond of flying, so don’t know how far I’d get as the crow flies. My favorite place to be is by the ocean, strolling along the shore at sunrise or sunset. My fantasy place to travel is Morocco simply because its aura captivated me in the movie classic, Casablanca.

Chick Lit Author: J.L. Penn

J.L. Penn lives in the suburbs of Maryland with her husband and daughter. She has been an avid reader and writer all her life. Although writing a book is something she always wanted to do, it was not until a stroke of inspiration hit that she decided to seriously sit down and write. To her surprise, with a tiny kernel of truth and a lot of imagination, the words just flowed out and became Reunion. She is now actively working on an unrelated novel, and a sequel to Reunion is also in the works. J.L. (Jenn) enjoys cooking, scrapbooking, romantic comedies, and music when she’s not reading or writing.

Interview with Claire Matturro

Q: Is there a certain area where you do all your writing?

A.. When I told my husband that I was going to quit my teaching job and write a book, he built me a den on the side of our house. It is a very quiet room, with a window right over my ancient computer, and the window looks out into the woods. I’ve done all my writing in this room.

Q: What do you find most difficult about writing?

A.. For me, the creative process is fun. The hard part is the mechanical part, or maybe one would call it the physical side of writing: the typing, the spell-checking, and the sitting down in a chair in front of a keyboard aspect of writing.

Q: And what is your favorite part about writing?

A.. Making stuff up based upon little snippets of real life. That is, overhearing a conversation between two people and spinning out a whole imagined life for them and adding action to their talk. Just making up stories is a lot of fun too, regardless of the inspiration.

Q: You have four novels out, all based on the character Lilly. She is lawyer and you were a lawyer. Was she based off you in any way?
A. Not really, though we do share a vegetarian diet and a wry humor and a somewhat cynical outlook.. Lilly is more of a composite of other lawyers I have known. Some of Lilly’s better character traits are based upon a couple of my former law partners too.
Q: Is there going to be a 5th novel about Lilly?
A.. It’s really hard to say at this point, but if there is, it will not be anytime soon.

Q: On the other hand, would you want to write a novel with a new character as the heroine?
A.. I’m actually doing some nonfiction writing of late, and re-doing a pre-Lilly manuscript with a strong female lead who is a librarian. Librarians always seem to know how to figure things out and find information that it seems a natural profession for an amateur sleuth.
Q: I read that you graduated from law school, and then worked as a lawyer for a decade. When did you decide you wanted to start writing?

A. Actually, I decided I wanted to write when I was still in grade school, but it took me a long time to make the leap. Pesky thing about earning my living held me back for decades.

Q: Do you have a favorite book or author of your own?
A. My answer on that tends to change with the seasons except for a few really basic books, which I consider fundamental: Huck Finn and Tom Sawyer and To Kill a Mockingbird, each of which I reread every decade. As for a favorite author, it’d be a tie between Barbara Kingsolver, Wendell Berry, and Anne Lamont. But, you know, ask me in a month and I might have discovered or rediscovered somebody new.
Q: What do you like to do with your down time?
A. Garden and photography. Especially, taking photographs of what I find in and around my garden.
Q: Where would be or is your favorite place to travel?
I hope to go to Italy someday, but I have not gotten there yet. I love the Pacific Northwest as a place to visit, and hope to see many more of the National Parks in this country.

Interview with Poonam Sharma

Q: You are an MBA and a real estate developer. You have written books on being an entrepreneur and starting you own business. What made you decide to write novels?

I’ve always had a dichotomy in my passions (as much as in my life choices), between the practical and the sentimental. On some level, I think that through my writing I was able to begin to strike a balance by giving myself permission to pursue both. I had always hoped for the day when I’d find myself ready to tackle a novel. But for a long time, I suspect that I was building up the nerve. Even as I was writing business books, the idea of a novel was always in the back of my mind. But there is an audacity required of a novelist which (for me) wasn’t required for business books. It’s the confidence to believe that how you perceive the world is both intricate and insightful enough to justify an entire novel. For me, it wasn’t the decision to write novels; it was the sense that I was finally ready. Or more accurately, the realization that I had done enough living to finally understand that I had something of value to say.

Q: Where do you draw your inspiration from?

My inspiration comes from my life. I would be lying if I said my work was autobiographical, because there’s always a huge departure from my actual experience/self to the character and the story that will ultimately make its way to the bookshelf. But I cannot fathom writing a novel with a protagonist to whom I did not relate deeply. Essentially, I take a personal experience, or a core of some deep emotional experience I have had, and it becomes the kernel around which the character’s dilemma/trauma/odyssey is born. The good news is that writing from the heart keeps me engrossed and glued to my laptop. The bad news is that — even though the final character is not actually ever me — I take readers’ reactions very personally as a result. It’s an emotional roller coaster, for sure.

Q: How do handle all the different titles you have? Do you ever get any free time?

The truth is that I write in bursts, so in between there are months at a time where I don’t write much of anything, and feel quite intellectually frustrated as a result! But writing, when I’m passionate about a story, doesn’t feel like work; it feels like an intellectual and emotional self-indulgence. Kind of like a runner’s high. And the way I see it is that I’m very blessed to have not one but two careers which fulfill me: real estate development and writing.

Q: What is your favorite part of writing?

When I solidify my first sentence of the novel. It can take millions of iterations. But when it’s right, it’s like music to my heart.

Q: Do you have a third novel in the works?

Yes, I’m working on something very different from the previous two. It won’t fall into the chick lit genre. It is a more serious novel, full of philosophical questions, personal demons, centuries old legend, and of course a romantic back-story. It has been exhausting so far, but also very rewarding to try another genre. It is definitely my most ambitious project yet!

Q: Do you have a favorite book or author?

Not just one. There are novels where the prose is magnificent (Bel Canto), novels where the imagery is staggering (The Ground Beneath Her Feet), novels where the universality of message is astounding (The Alchemist), and books which remind a writer how lucky he/she is, to do what they love (On Writing). There are so many authors whose work I admire, that I could never choose just one. They feed my brain, fuel my neuroses, and remind me that I can always always do better.

Q: What do you think is the most difficult part of writing a novel?

The most difficult part for me is what Anne Lamot (in her book Bird By Bird) refers to as ‘killing your babies’. Basically its the aspect of revision which requires you to remove all the flowery language which (besides being music to your ears) does nothing to actually move the book forward. When you sit with a story, a character, a chapter for so long…you can become so attached that this feel like actual pain. You just have to remind yourself that if the true beauty of the novel can really be excised with the slice of a sentence, then perhaps the complete product isn’t what you thought it was.

Q: Your first novel, Girl Most Likely To, touches on interracial romances and cultural conservatism. How important were those subjects for you to write about?

I have always felt that there were few representations out there of both the richness received and the work involved in having to translate for every relationship of your life (from family, to boyfriends, to friends of various ethnicities…). But I don’t write those relationships make a point. I write them because they are what I know.

Q: Is there one goal you have for yourself that you haven’t achieved yet?

One? How about one hundred? I’m not as laser-focused as I was perhaps in my twenties about crossing items off of a bucket list, but there are always goals on my mind. A bestseller and a movie deal wouldn’t hurt. Neither would taking my company public. Of course, finding an anti-wrinkle cream that actually halts the aging process wouldn’t hurt either.

Q: I read that you spent a year traveling the world to find inspiring entrepreneurs. What was your favorite place you visited?

That was one of the best years of my life, and the whole experience fundamentally changed the way I have seen things ever since. Since I was travelling alone, I had my fair share of adventure, but my fair share of danger as well. That was also the year when I learned to appreciate solitude, and to enjoy my own company. Off the top of my head I would say that one of my favorite places was Cape Tribulation in Australia. I rented a hut in a backpackers resort in the middle of a rainforest, won the title Limbo Queen Of The Jungle, snorkeled the reef alongside baby sharks, and rode a horse bareback into the ocean and swam around with him. And I’ve always felt that Australians represent the best of American independent spirit and European joie de vivre rolled up into one delightful package.