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Author Profile: Allison Winn Scotch

Author Name: Allison Winn Scotch
Website: http://www.allisonwinn.com/
Bio: Allison Winn Scotch graduated cum laude from the University of Pennsylvania with a BA in Honors History and Concentration in Marketing from the Wharton School of Business. After working in the PR, marketing and internet worlds, she discovered that there’s nothing finer than working for yourself, working from home and getting paid to write full-time. She worked as a freelance magazine scribe for magazines such as Glamour, Self, Shape, Redbook, Men’s Health, Women’s Health, Family Circle, InStyle Weddings, Bride’s, Cooking Light, Parents, American Baby. More currently, Allison primarily focuses on celebrity interviews and profiles.
Titles: The Department of Lost and Found, Time of My Life, The One That I Want.

Author Profile: Dorothy Howell

Author Name: Dorothy Howell

Website: http://www.dorothyhowellnovels.com/books.html
Bio: Dorothy Howell is the author of 26 novels. She’s written for three major New York publishing houses. Her books have been translated into a dozen languages, with sales approaching 3 million copies worldwide. Dorothy currently writes for two publishing houses, in two genres, under two names. Dorothy also writes historical romance novels under the pen name Judith Stacy. Her titles include Harlequin Historical’s Top Seller of the Year, a No.1 on the Barnes & Noble historical list, and a RITA Award Finalist. More information is available at www.JudithStacy.com. Dorothy is a member of Sisters in Crime, Mystery Writers of America, and Romance Writers of America. She’s a requested speaker at writing, civic, and women’s organizations, and has appeared on television and radio promoting her work.
Tiles: Handbags and Homicide, Purses and Poison, and Should Bags and Shootings.
Currently: Dorothy currently lives in Southern California.

Interview with Adele Parks

Q: How did you choose a career in writing?
A: I’ve wanted this for as long as I can remember but for years I thought it was an unrealistic ambition. I just didn’t know how to go about it or whether I was producing anything any one would ever want to read! But you don’t know what you can do until you try, which is an obvious thing to say but still worth saying. Whatever your ambition is, give it a go (providing it is legal!).

Q: Where do you find the inspiration for your novels?
A: Life sparks my imagination but I never write biographies of individuals or try to reproduce people I know; my friends are saved that indignity. My characters are an amalgamation of a number of people I’ve met, watched or heard about plus a great big dose of ‘but what if…?’. The question ‘but what if…?’ is the one that kindles my imagination.

Q: You have many books in print. Is there one in particular that you really enjoyed writing or doing the research for?
A: I have ten novels in print. I’ve written ten novels in ten years which surprises me every time I think of it. I love all my babies but I can, hand on heart, say that my latest Men I’ve Loved Before is one of my favourites possibly my absolute favourite. There are some really meaty issues in there. It’s my sister’s favourite and she’s quite a tough judge!

Q: If you weren’t a writer, what do you think you would be doing for a career?
A: I might be a photographer. I love capturing who and what we are. People are infinitely splendid and stupid – that’s what’s so great about us. If not a photographer then maybe a Time Lord; I’m big into Dr Who

Q: How did you celebrate your first novel being published?
A: I got pregnant!

Q: How do you spend any free time you can get?
A: With my family. I’m married with one son. We’re a tiny unit but we adore each other. I’m very lucky and before I know it my son will be a teenager and his hormones will declare war on me so I’m enjoying as much time with him now as I possibly can.

Q: What is one personal or professional goal you have yet to achieve?
A: There are lots of things I’ve yet to achieve. It would be lovely to see one of my books made into a film or TV series. I’m always drifting in and out of options but nothing has gone into production yet. I think it’s good to have a dream though… I’d also really love to learn to stand on my head or do a cartwheel. I was a chubby kid and didn’t shine at anything remotely athletic; I’m now going to yoga classes and dream of standing on my head.

Q: Are you currently working on a novel?
A: Yes, I’m always currently working on a novel. I’m just putting the finishing touches to 2011’s novel, which is about friendship.

Q: What would be your advice to writers?
A:
1. Read. Novels, articles, newspapers – anything you can get your hands on. If you are not familiar (in fact in love) with the written word, you’ll never be a decent writer.
2. Write. Seriously, it astonishes me how many people tell me they want to be a writer but then confess they never write anything more elaborate than a shopping list. Write everyday even if it’s only for 20 minutes. Discipline is key.
3. Develop a thick skin, you’ll almost certainly get a few knock backs along the way. Pick yourself up brush yourself down and start all over again. Talent will break through.
4. Consider going on a course/join an online support group. I did a degree in English Literature and Language, I’m not suggesting you have to do the same but a weekend creative writing course may help with understanding the tools of the trade such as structure, plot and characterisation. You’ll also meet other would be writers and they can offer support.
5. Listen. Be inspired by everything that is going on around you.

Q: I’ve read that you’ve done quite a bit of traveling. What was your favorite place to visit?
A: The next place.

Author Profile: Jandy Nelson

Author Name: Jandy Nelson

Website: http://www.jandynelson.com/

Bio: Jandy received a BA from Cornell, an MFA from Brown in poetry, and another MFA from Vermont College in writing for children and young adults. It was at Vermont College, under the tutelage of amazing mentors, where the whole marvelous world of children’s literature opened up for her. That was her inspiration to work around the clock on a first novel after previously being devoted solely to writing poetry. For the past twelve years Jandy has been a literary agent with Manus & Associates Literary Agency. Before agenting, she worked in theater, doing everything from making palm trees out of styrofoam to stage managing to dramaturgy. She loves teaching, and plans to do more in the near future. She has taught creative writing at Brown and other places, and gives lectures and workshops on various subjects at writer’s conferences all over the country throughout the year.

Titles: The Sky is Everywhere
Author Name: Jandy Nelson

Website: http://www.jandynelson.com/

Bio: Jandy received a BA from Cornell, an MFA from Brown in poetry, and another MFA from Vermont College in writing for children and young adults. It was at Vermont College, under the tutelage of amazing mentors, where the whole marvelous world of children’s literature opened up for her. That was her inspiration to work around the clock on a first novel after previously being devoted solely to writing poetry. For the past twelve years Jandy has been a literary agent with Manus & Associates Literary Agency. Before agenting, she worked in theater, doing everything from making palm trees out of styrofoam to stage managing to dramaturgy. She loves teaching, and plans to do more in the near future. She has taught creative writing at Brown and other places, and gives lectures and workshops on various subjects at writer’s conferences all over the country throughout the year.

Titles: The Sky is Everywhere

Interview with Grace Coopersmith

Q: Did you always know you wanted to be a writer?
I always wrote, but I didn’t really think of writing books until I was in high school. I wrote compulsively, and I still do. It’s a way to express and entertain myself. When I went to college, I thought I wanted to be a poet. Then I learned that I don’t have a good sense of meter. I now limit myself to writing silly poems for fun.
Q: What is your favorite aspect of the writing process?
Sometimes I write a sentence that I know is absolutely right and I get a wonderful feeling of satisfaction. I can read the sentence ten times in a row and I don’t doubt it or want to change it. I’m also delighted when I get an email from a fan. It’s amazing to me that I can entertain people all over the country and it’s a kick when I get an email from another country.
Q: Where did you find the inspiration for your latest book, Nancy’s Theory of Style?
I’m also the author of the Casa Dracula series of paranormal romantic comedies under my own name, Marta Acosta. Nancy first appears in my series as the main character’s best friend from a fancy university. I loved writing Nancy’s absurd and amusing dialogue. She was a character I could imagine perfectly, a rich girl you’re prepared to hate, but can’t because she’s so much fun and actually good-hearted. When my editor suggested a book based on Nancy, I jumped at the chance.
I’d had girlfriends who lived in chic, very girly Pacific Heights apartments, and I could easily imagine Nancy living there and popping into local boutiques and bistros.
Q: How do you respond if someone tells you “chick lit is dead?”
I say that it’s trendy to say chick lit is dead, but readers still love stories about young women venturing out into the world looking for a place and love. I think the backlash against chick lit is based on the bad chick lit that flooded the market – and we can blame publishers who were trying to cash in on the popularity – and sexism. You never hear “vacuous military thrillers are dead” or “voyeuristic books about serial murderers who kill strippers and convent girls are dead.” The people who are so appalled at humorous romantic women’s fiction give a pass to any sort of trash written for a male audience. So the idea that they’re maintaining literary standards is patently false.
Q: If you look back at your style throughout the years, what is one of the biggest blunders you made?
I don’t look at my eccentric choices as blunders, but as individualism. A ‘50s sequined cocktail dress, a man’s sharkskin suit, black leather miniskirts, cowboy boots, rhinestone jewelry, my extensive collection of vintage hats…all of those things were fabulous. I probably shouldn’t have hiked around San Francisco in stilettos, though. My feet have never recovered.
Q: If you could choose one celebrity and raid their closet, who would it be and why?
I’ve been noticing Sharon Osborne’s clothes lately. I only see her wearing black and white, exquisitely crafted clothes. They’re subtle, but gorgeous, austere, yet extravagant. Prada, Chanel, Marc Jacobs, Dolce & Gabbana… She looks like the severe headmistress of the world’s most exclusive academy. It’s a wardrobe for a woman who knows exactly who she is.
Q: What are three items you cannot leave the house without?
My purse always gets too heavy since I constantly throw in lipsticks, pens, and notepads. That’s not very glamorous, I’m afraid. I also take L’Occitane lemon verbena handwipes because I hate germs and I like the scent.
Q: You are from the San Francisco Bay Area, someplace I would love to visit. What sites would you definitely recommend checking out?
There are so many places! I always take visitors up the glass elevator at the St. Francis Hotel. It’s the best free ride in the city and there are spectacular views. If you wanted to do the “Nancy” tour, you’d have to visit lively Ferry Plaza, shop along the Fillmore Street boutiques, have dinner at one of the hip South of Market restaurants, and go to Union Square. Nancy also meets her parents at the Top of the Mark on Nob Hill, and she goes to an old time North Beach bar, like the Tosca. She spends afternoons at Alta Plaza Park in Pacific Heights, which has wonderful views to the city and the bay.
San Francisco is urban, but geographically small so it’s easy to navigate.
Q: What is your advice for aspiring writers?
Realize that you can be a better writer and try to be better. Be willing to rewrite. Be willing to listen to advice. You don’t have to take it, but you should set your feelings aside and consider it. Support other writers and they will remember and support you. If you admire a writer, go to her website and you may find good suggestions and advice there. Don’t give up even when you’re discouraged.
Q: Where would be your dream vacation?
London is my favorite city and I always want to go there. It’s such a beautiful, exciting city, and I love going to the theatre, the opera, the museums. I’ve always wanted to have the time to take a train across the United States and stop whenever I saw something interesting. I have a strong desire to go with my best friend to the World’s Longest Yard Sale, which stretches from Michigan to Alabama, because I love vintage finds.
Thanks, Samantha, for having me at Chick Lit Plus! I’m glad you’re carrying the flag for romantic, funny stories by women.

Interview with Micheline McAllister

Q: What is it about writing that you love so much? There are so many different things that I love about writing, but I guess if I had to narrow it down I would say, for me it is about telling a great story. As well, I really enjoy the process of getting to know my characters and seeing where they take me.

Q: Your first novel, Welcome to My Life, is about a personal assistant working in Hollywood and gives a behind the scenes look at the life of celebrities. Where does your insider knowledge stem from? I have worked in the “industry” since I was young. I started as an actress, then moved to animation, and when animation crashed, I became a personal assistant between jobs. Of course the book is fictional, but is also pretty real at the same time. I always found myself in situations and thought about people in the real world followed by, “they have no idea.” I love the entertainment industry and can’t imagine my life any other way, but it is so much fun to make fun of at the same time.

Q: How were you able to break into the writing industry? I just believed I could do it. I sat down, wrote and wrote and wrote and then submitted. I submitted to agents, contests, magazines, whatever I found. I never for one minute thought that I couldn’t do it. I also showed my work to everyone, because when I was a teenager I went to see Back to the Future and George McFly was telling Marty that he never let anyone read his work. At that point we already knew he wasn’t successful and he wasn’t a writer, so I remembered that and even when afraid, I always show my work to others.

Q: When you were growing up, what did you think would be your career? A writer. I always loved telling stories, so I knew that someday I would write. I had planned on taking over the world of Hollywood as an actress, but honestly, I always wrote and knew that no matter where the acting career took me, writing would be a big part of my life.

Q: Who are some of your favorite authors? I love so many different genres that this may not make any sense, so I will just start with the ones in the same genre as me: Marian Keyes, Sophie Kinsella, Jane Green, Jennifer Weiner and Cecelia Ahern. I also love Stephan King, Robert Ludlum and John Grisham. That said I am a huge fan of Russian, French and Irish literature. Crime & Punishment, Les Miserables & Dracula being three of my all time favorite books. Oh and Dickens, I love Dickens. As you can see, this list could go on forever.

Q: What would you say is the hardest part about writing a book, start to finish? Just the time it takes to sit down and write. I am lucky in that I usually don’t get writer’s block, so once I decide on a story, I just write and it comes out. I also still work in animation, so there are times when I am working 7 days a week 14+ hours a day and then it is hard to get writing in, but I always try to do at least an hour a day.

Q: What are three items you can never leave the house without? My MyTouch phone, a notepad and my Nook.

Q: Are you a fan of reality shows? If so, which one would you most likely be on? I like the contest ones, but not the scripted fake ones. I would love to be on the Amazing Race!

Q: What is your best advice for aspiring writers? My advice is if you want to write, then you have to write. I meet so many new people and they say they want to write, but never do. It is really the only way to be a writer. Also, it is very important to not take rejection personally; it is part of the business. In addition to rejection, you need to be able to take critiques and not be offended, but instead make the changes needed for a stronger story. My last piece of advice is to have fun. We are so lucky that we get to write so enjoy it.

Q: Where would be your dream vacation? Paris. I would like to take one of those Paris Writer Retreats and just be inspired by the city writing by day, going out at night, and of course getting lots of shopping in.

Author Profile: Danielle Ganek

Author Name: Danielle Ganek
Website: http://www.danielleganek.com/index.php
Bio: Perhaps it was a sign when, at the age of nine, she dressed as a bookworm (tights, antennae and an enormous painted cardboard “book”) for an improvised American-style Halloween in Sao Paolo, Brazil that Danielle Ganek would one day become a writer. Although American, she spent most of her childhood in Brazil and then in Lausanne, Switzerland. She says she always felt like a foreigner even when she returned to the United States at the age of 16 to attend the Walnut Hill School for the Arts. “Being a perpetual outsider made me a constant observer and I began writing as a child,” she says.

Upon receiving a B.A. in English from Franklin and Marshall College, Danielle moved to New York City to write. She lived with two aspiring actresses in a fifth floor walk up in Chelsea and worked in the magazine world, eventually landing at French department store chain Galeries Lafayette as a Creative Director. At the same time, she continued to study writing, with classes at Columbia University School of Continuing Education, Writers Boot Camp and the Writers Studio. She wrote pieces of novels and short stories, with much of her early work focusing on women pursuing their creative goals.

When Danielle had her first child, Galeries Lafayette closed in New York and she took this as a sign to stop working full- time and focus on writing and being a mother. After three children and a move to Connecticut she and her husband returned to their beloved New York City in 2005 and Danielle focused her efforts on completing a novel. Lulu Meets God And Doubts Him was published by Viking in June 2007. The Summer We Read Gatsby follows in June 2010.
Titles: Lulu Meets God and Doubts Him, The Summer We Read Gatsby
Currently: Danielle currently lives in New York City with her husband, three children and some inspiring art.

Author Profile: Jill Egizii

Author Name: Jill Egizii
Website: http://www.thelookoflovebook.com/index.html
Biography: Jill Egizii is an advocate for parental alienation awareness. She is politically active, serving as an Alderman in the city of Leland Grove, Illinois. Illinois Speaker of the House Michael Madigan appointed Jill to the Illinois Family Law Study Committee, whose mission is to revamp state divorce law.

Jill is also a board member of Children Need Both Parents, a not-for-profit organization emphasizing shared parenting, and the Parental Alienation Awareness Organization (PAAO), whose mission is to educate people about parental alienation. Jill also serves as an advisor to the board of The Institute for the American Family.

For fifteen years, Jill has served as a board member for United Cerebral Palsy and hosts their weekly television program, Life Without Limits. Each year, Jill facilitates and hosts the United Cerebral Palsy Telethon and is a powerful voice for all people with disabilities.
Currently: Jill is married to an electrical contractor and is the mother of four children. In her spare time she runs and spends quality time with her husband and their Bernese Mountain Dogs, Coco and Jack.
Titles: The Look of Love

Interview with Marla Martenson

Q: How did you get into writing? I wanted to be a writer since I was in grade school. I used to write letters to my favorite authors telling them how I wanted to do what they did when I grew up. I used to write a lot of poetry and short stories. Then my interest switched to acting and I did that for twenty years, but writing was always in the back of my mind. I didn’t have the confidence to write and get my stories out there. Once I started working as a matchmaker, I realized that I had a lot to say about what men and women are looking for in a partner and a lot of tips to ensure a successful date, so I went for it and starting writing my first book, Excuse Me, Your Soul Mate Is Waiting in 2006. It was published in 2008.

Q: How did you realize you were good at matchmaking? I realized it on the job. I am a people person and found that I am very patient and a good listener and also my positive sunny nature helps a lot as well since clients demands can be outrageous on occasion.

Q: How do you pair up potential couples? I meet with both parties and make a detailed profile on them. After that I look to see which of my clients will match up well based on their criteria and lifestyle. I contact the woman first and tell her all about the man I have in mind for her. If she agrees, then I contact the man and give him her info and number, he calls and asks her for a date. After the date I get feedback from both parties and pass it along if asked.

Q: What is your favorite part of a wedding? The cake!

Q: How did you meet your husband? A mutual friend introduced us on May 21st 2001. My husband is an entertainer and was playing the piano and singing at a piano bar in Playa Del Rey, Los Angeles. My friend took me there one evening, I walked right up to the piano and introduced myself, and we have been together ever since.

Q: What are your top 3 dating tips? 1. Don’t talk about your ex. Your date does not want to hear about your bad break up or your drama. 2. Keep your phone in your purse, answering calls or texting at the dinner table is just plain rude. Give your date your full attention. 3. Listen more than you talk. Be truly interested in your date. I have heard so many times from both parties, “All my date did all night was talk about themselves.”

Q: Your latest book, Diary of a Beverley Hills Matchmaker, looks to be hilarious. How much fun did you have writing this? I had a blast writing this book. It is a true story and people keep telling me that they can’t believe it is all true! I have a lot of fun reading it as well since my friends and family are the stars!

Q: Do you have any new projects in the works? Yes, I am writing the sequel to Diary of a Beverly Hills Matchmaker now, it will be published in the fall of 2011.

Q: What is some love advice you can give to readers? I would say not to give up on love, there is a top for every pot. But the most important thing is to work on yourself before you look for someone to get into a relationship with. Make sure you have worked through your issues, are open and ready for a relationship. If you need to get healthy, or lose a few pounds to feel great and raise your confidence, do that so that you are your best you and bring something great to the table.

Q; How about your best advice for aspiring writers? Just go for it. Write and enjoy the process. The publishing industry is a tough one to crack, so make sure that you are writing because you love it. It is not a way to get rich quick. Writers are also readers, so read everything you can get your hands on, all genres. Reading opens your mind and gets your creative juices flowing.

Q: Where is your favorite place to travel? I love Europe, I have been about 12 times. I speak fluent French, Spanish and get by in Italian. Paris is my all time favorite, and Prague was a dream. I also go to Mexico every year. My husband is from Mexico City so we go visit family. We recently went to Guanajuato which was a 5 hour bus ride from Mexico City. It was so amazing. I felt like I was in Spain. It was one of the most beautiful places I have ever been. I would love to spend a few months living there writing a new masterpiece.