CHAT WITH JENNIFER LANE

JenniferLane

People fascinate the psychologist/author (psycho author) known as Jennifer Lane. Her therapy clients talk to her all day long about their dreams and secrets, and her characters tell her their stories at night. Jen delights in peeling away the layers to scrutinize their psyches and emotions. But please rest assured, dear reader, she isn’t psychoanalyzing you right now. She’s already got too many voices in her head! 

Stories of redemption interest Jen the most, especially the healing power of love. She is the author of The Conduct Series—-romantic suspense for adult readers—-and recently completed the third and final installment: On Best BehaviorStreamline is her first foray into writing for young and new adults, but she’s found this sort of writing even more fun. A former college swimmer, Jen was able to put a lot of her own experiences into this book.

Time to chat with Jen!

What is your latest book?

My September, 2013 release is On Best Behavior (The Conduct Series #3): the conclusion of a romantic suspense trilogy. In the first novel With Good Behavior, former psychologist Sophie Taylor and former Navy lieutenant Grant Madsen meet on their parole officer’s doorstep and strive to make a life outside. This recent installment finds Grant going undercover to infiltrate the Russian Mafia—not his smartest idea ever—and Sophie has to use her knowledge of human nature to try to save him.

JenLaneBooks

What are the special challenges in writing a series?

It’s a tough balance deciding how much background information to include for each sequel. I don’t want to bore readers who have just completed the previous book, and I don’t want to confuse readers who have waited months for the next book.

I like to feature favorite side characters in each sequel (like potty-mouth ship captain Roger Eaton) but sometimes it’s a challenge to find meaningful ways to include them in the story arc.

Finally, this hasn’t been a challenge in a trilogy, but I can imagine authors who write long series with the same characters might find it difficult to keep the plot fresh.

If you were to advertise your book on a bumper sticker, what would it say?

REDEMPTION!

What else have you written?

Besides The Conduct Series, I’ve written a New Adult swimming romance: Streamline. I swam and played volleyball in college, so it’s a blast writing about college athletes. My WIP is a NA volleyball political romance titled Blocked.

Some writers edit excessively as they write; others wait until a novel is finished to do the bulk of the editing. How about you?

I wish I could learn how to crank out a messy first draft, but alas, I edit as I go. Still, my editors find SO MUCH to correct before publication! 🙂

How important is the choosing of character names to you? Have you ever decided on a name and then changed it because it wasn’t right for the character?

Choosing fitting character names is essential, in my opinion. I like to select meaningful names that lend themselves to fun nicknames.

For Streamline, I chose to name my swimmer hero Leo, indicating strength of character and physique. He needs plenty of both to survive the torture he endures.

Leo and his brother have fun coming up with nicknames for their abusive father Commander Scott, like Cruel SoB, Crusty Slimebucket, Constipated Stool-Sample, and Cat’s Sandbox.

Have you ever written characters that you truly despise?

Sometimes I set out to create despicable characters but inevitably I find some redeeming value in their personality. Perhaps it’s my psychology background forcing me to search for character motivation that resolves to find the greyness of characters. I believe we all have excellent reasons for doing what we do—including villains.

Do you write anything besides novels? Care to share?

I’ve written psychology research articles and book chapters, which are nowhere near as fun as writing novels. I also write progress notes for my psychotherapy clients every day.

Having our work out there to be judged by strangers is often daunting for writers. Do you have any tips on handling a negative review?

I try never to respond publicly to negative reviews. Privately, I cope with particularly “ouchy” reviews by venting to a group of author friends. I understand that readers feel angry and disappointed when a book doesn’t live up to expectations, and it’s certainly true that an author can’t please everyone. Reading is so subjective. Still, some negative reviews really sting, especially if they don’t offer constructive feedback. Occasionally I laugh at a critical review, like when one reader called my beta hero a “wuss”.

Where do you live now? If you had to move to another city/state/country, where might that be?

I live in Columbus, Ohio. I like experiencing all seasons and the low cost of living, but I’d love to live right on the beach one day. Water is soothing and spiritual for me.

What’s the best gift you’ve ever received?

My oldest sister lived in Tokyo for a year, and she bought a plane ticket for me to visit her there. What a fascinating culture! We stumbled upon a hidden garden that mesmerized us, near Asakusa.

What are the most important traits you look for in a friend?

Intelligence, honesty, humility, physical fitness, and most importantly, a kickbutt sense of humor!

What’s the move valuable class you’ve ever taken?

I think the Psychology of Women class in college was most valuable for me. When I told the professor I thought about getting a master’s degree, she responded, “Of course you’ll get your Ph.D., won’t you?” Suddenly a doctorate was an option in my life. I love my career as a psychologist—I feel called to be a therapist—and I have her to thank.

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CHAT WITH BARBARA ELLEN BRINK

BarbaraEllenBrinkBarbara Ellen Brink is an author, wife, mother, and dog walker. She grew up on a small farm in Washington State, but now lives in the mean “burbs” of Minnesota with her husband and their dogs, Rugby & Willow. In her spare time – when she’s not reading – she likes to ride motorcycles, visit local wineries, and catch up on the latest movies. She is the author of The Fredrickson Winery Novels, Entangled, Crushed and Savor, as well as the young adult Amish Bloodsuckers Trilogy series, inspirational suspense novels Running Home and Alias Raven Black, and speculative thriller Split Sense.

Time to chat with Barbara!

I hear you have some very exciting news! Can you share it with us?

Savor, the 3rd book in my Fredrickson Winery series, was just released into the world! It has actually been 2 ½ years since book two, Crushed, debuted. Since then, I have been bombarded by fans of the series asking when the next book would be available. And here it is!

Savor continues the saga of the Fredricksons and Parkers as they run a small California winery and find love and mystery in the Napa Valley. Savor celebrates the joy of romance, laughter, and family.

Savor

Here is a brief blurb:

Savor the moment, cause it just might be your last…

Newly married, Billie and Handel find themselves knee-deep in another mystery. Defending a wealthy San Francisco businessman against capital murder charges, Handel soon discovers that media attention brings more than fame and fortune. When Billie’s life is threatened, he believes it’s connected to the case, and he’ll do whatever it takes to keep her safe.

Across the vineyard, Margaret has problems of her own. Davy’s Italian grandfather is in town and starts right in where his son left off. Throwing the weight of his money around, he intends to prove that Davy would be better off living with him in Italy. To complicate things further, Billie and Adam’s mom flies in from Minnesota and starts dating the man who is making Margaret’s life miserable.

What are the special challenges in writing a series?

For me the challenge was learning enough about the wine industry to sound like I know what I’m talking about, without boring people silly with too many facts. Also, I needed to keep the characters fresh, give them some new adventures, new interests, and of course new hurdles to jump.Entangled

What else have you written?

This past year I published a young adult series called, The Amish Bloodsuckers Trilogy. Chosen, Shunned, and Reckoning. It was a ton of fun to write, filled with humor, romance, teenaged angst, and of course lots of vampire slaying. Sort of like Buffy The Vampire Slayer meets the Amish Mafia. Or something like that. Of course, my slayer’s name is Jael and her ancestor is actually from the Bible, in the book of Judges. She was the character who killed an evil general by pounding a tent peg into his head while he slept. She was the very first vampire slayer. At least that’s my story and I’m sticking to it.

What do you think some of the greatest misconceptions about indie authors are?

Indie authors are often lumped all together – writers who just don’t have what it takes or aren’t good enough to get published the traditional route. Because of the ease of putting stuff up online these days, there are many self-published writers who haven’t taken the time to learn the craft, don’t bother to edit, and probably shouldn’t be sharing their work until they put a few thousand more hours of learning in. I’m sorry to say, I’ve read a few of those myself.

But as in any occupation, there are those who just want to get by and those who really care about what they do. There are many more wonderful self-published authors who are dedicated to their craft, striving to improve and make their work the best it can be. I prefer to be in that camp.

Crush

Some writers edit excessively as they write; others wait until a novel is finished to do the bulk of the editing. How about you?

I do tend to go back after every few pages and rewrite and edit as I go along. Of course I still do multiple edits afterwards, my editor has a go at it, and I usually have trusted people read and critique before I feel comfortable releasing it into the wild.

How important is the choosing of character names to you? Have you ever decided on a name and then changed it because it wasn’t right for the character?

Actually the thing I have the most problem with when I begin a novel is giving all my characters names that begin with the same first letter. I get halfway through a book and suddenly realize I have a Sam, Stan, Stacy, and Sheila. Confusing, right? It’s a crazy problem but has happened to me more than once. So, I usually rename half the characters well into my writing.

Have you ever written characters that you truly despise?

Yes, in fact, one of the characters that showed up in both Entangled and Crushed was a horrible man. I won’t go into any details because I wouldn’t want to ruin the story for anyone, but he is despicable and I just wanted to throw him under a train.

Do you allow others to read your work in progress, or do you keep it a secret until you’ve finished your first draft? Can you elaborate?

I have always been shy about showing my unfinished work to anyone. Even my husband. I only hand it out when it’s complete and then wait on pins and needles for him to read it (pretending all the while that I really don’t care that much), and hoping for lavish praise. *That’s why you should never rely on people you feed for an honest and trustworthy opinion. 🙂

Do you dread writing a synopsis for your novel as much as most writers do? Do you think writing a synopsis is inherently evil? Why?

Yes, I hate writing synopsis. Condensing a four-hundred-page book into two to five pages is nothing short of water-boarding. I think the birth of the synopsis came about during the Middle ages as a form of torture for fools in the king’s court, or something like that. The fool was probably a profound and deep orator before he was forced to condense his words into a high-pitched laugh of madness.

If you were to write non-fiction, what might it be about?

I have actually been doing some family research and found ancestors with stories just begging to be told, so IF I were to follow that lead, I would write some type of historical family history probably set in the early 1800’s.

Having our work out there to be judged by strangers is often daunting for writers. Do you have any tips on handling a negative review?

I’ve seen many new writers get totally thrown by one bad review. They can’t believe someone would be so unkind as to say something negative about their perfect, awe-inspiring, totally amazing story. I think they may have grown up in one of those bubbles where their parents, friends and teachers all said how wonderful they were and they could be anything they wanted to be, even a fairy princess, with or without hard work. So, they believe a lie and refuse to believe they are fallible. Therefore, the reviewer must be crazy, or mean, or a horrible person who is personally trying to destroy their career.

First of all, I don’t think most reviewers are out to destroy anyone’s career. I think most are just giving their honest opinion about what they’ve read. The thing about opinions is, everyone has one and they don’t all have to be the same. As writers, we can learn from bad reviews much more than we will from the good. We agree with all the lavish praise but when someone points out negative aspects of our book, we cringe. What we should do is take an honest look at what they say and see if there is something there that actually rings true. Something we can change, improve upon, or watch out for.

We all know the old saying; you can’t judge a book by its cover. This is true. However, how much importance do you place on your book cover design?

As a self-published author I want to have a very professional looking cover. Books are certainly judged by their covers. Humans are prone to judge everything by the outward appearance first. So that cover is their first look at my work and if it doesn’t attract, they pass on by and go to the next cover that does. Sort of like speed dating. I want them to stop long enough to read the blurb and get sucked in, so a great cover is very important.

I’ve been lucky because my daughter is a graphic designer and after helping her through college, she owes me more than she can ever repay. I’m like the Godfather. I keep asking her for just one more cover… She has actually done a fantastic job on all of my covers and I couldn’t do it without her. You should check out the Amish Bloodsuckers covers. She drew them all out by hand first. I think they’re amazing. They give just the right feel to the story.

Where do you live now? If you had to move to another city/state/country, where might that be?

I live in Minnesota, but I would love to live further west. I grew up on the West coast and still prefer the dry desert air to Midwest humidity. Western Wyoming, where tornadoes are no longer an issue, would be about perfect.

What might we be surprised to know about you?

Wine makes me dizzy.

What makes you angry?

Slow drivers clogging the fast lane.

What was the most valuable class you ever took in school? Why?

Study hall. I had plenty of time to read lots and lots of books.

If you are a TV watcher, would you share the names of your favorite shows with us?

Right now I would say my favorites are Longmire, Blue Bloods, Foyle’s War (a British series), and Red Widow (which I just heard was cancelled).

What are three things you think we can all do to make the world a better place?

Get out of the fast lane if you’re going slower than the other traffic.

Write letters to the networks and complain about them cancelling decent shows while horrible reality TV is force-fed to us day after day.

Write a review for every book you read.

CONNECT WITH BARBARA

Links to buy Savor

CHAT WITH DONNA CUMMINGS

Donna_Cummings

Donna Cummings has worked as an attorney, winery tasting room manager, and retail business owner, but she admits nothing beats the thrill of writing humorously-ever-after romances. She resides in New England, although she fantasizes about spending the rest of her days in a tropical locale, wearing flip flops year-round, or in Regency London, scandalizing the ton. She can usually be found on Twitter talking about writing and coffee, and on Facebook talking about coffee and writing.

Time to chat with Donna!

What is your latest book?

My latest is a Regency romance titled Lord Rakehell’s Love. It’s a humorous novella which commences The Curse of True Love series, where Aphrodite, the Goddess of Love, decides to relieve her boredom by playing matchmaker in Regency London. Unfortunately, she manages to curse the lovers she’s trying to bring together, with the hero showing up late to his own wedding, causing heartbreak and scandal for the heroine since he’s also accompanied by ladies of the evening.

DonnaC_LordRakehell

What else have you written?

I’ve become a hybrid author this past year. I originally self-published a romantic comedy novella, and a full-length Regency historical in 2011. And then last December I published a full-length romantic comedy with Crimson Romance, and last April a humorous contemporary novella with Samhain. So my latest is the first self-pub I’ve done for a little while, and I’m excited I’m able to do both things.

How often do your characters surprise you by doing or saying something totally unexpected?

Every. Single. Day. LOL I recently had a character come back from the dead, and she’s not a zombie. The good thing is she was right, and I like where the story headed as a result.

What part of writing a novel do you enjoy the most? The least?

I love the dialogue. Since I write humorously-ever-after romance, the dialogue is usually witty banter, and it makes me laugh while I’m watching the characters flirt and fall in love with each other. I find description a little more challenging, because I have to fit it in without stopping the flow of conversation!

Some writers edit excessively as they write; others wait until a novel is finished to do the bulk of the editing. How about you?

I do most of the editing once I’ve finished the first draft, because I can’t really see the story until I’m done writing it. However, I think I kind of edit along the way too, because often a scene will pop into my head and I’ll think, “Aha! That’s why this section wasn’t working the way I wanted it to.” So I add that in, and rework something else. And as soon as I think I’ve figured out my “process”, it changes radically with the next book. LOL

How important is the choosing of character names to you? Have you ever decided on a name and then changed it because it wasn’t right for the character?

I’ve done this a couple of times! It’s like the character knows they’ve been put in the wrong story, so they won’t talk to the other characters, or interact with them. As soon as I find the name that works, they perk up and start showing their personality. It’s funny how having the wrong name is like miscasting a character.

Have you ever written characters that you truly despise?

I haven’t. Although there are a couple that I think *other* characters despise. LOL But since that’s their role, to be despised, it all works out. I have a villain in Lord Midnight, another one of my Regency historicals, and he fascinates me because he truly believes he’s doing what’s right–for him, of course. And he’s frustrated at being thwarted by everyone around him. So he’s despicable, and does awful things to reach his goals, but I’m intrigued by his skewed world view.

Do you have any advice for first-time authors?

Write what makes you happy. There’s nothing more exhilarating than diving into your story, and playing with the characters, and seeing this creation come to life. So do that. Enjoy it without worrying about whether people will like it, or whether it’s publishable, or anything else. Doubt is always hanging around the corner, trying to get you to stop what you’re working on, but just keep having fun. You’ll also discover your writing style, and your voice, and that’s the most valuable tool you’ll have as a writer.

Please, tell us about your experiences with social media. What are your favorite and least-favorite parts of it?

I am a Twitter fiend! I’m thrilled it was invented, and I wish they’d quit tinkering with it, because the latest update seems to impede conversation rather than aid it. Still, I have found a lot of fun writer friends there, and it’s always a thrill when readers come looking for me on Twitter after reading one of my books. I love chatting with them, probably too much because sometimes they kick me off so I’ll go write!

If you were to write a non-fiction book, what might it be about?

I’ve actually compiled my blog posts from the past few years, which are filled with what I hope is inspiration and motivation for other writers, and I’ll be self-publishing the book in the near future. It’s called An Encouraging Word.

Where do you live now? If you had to move to another city/state/country, where might that be?

I’m in New England right now, and I love it most of the time. There’s nothing more spectacular than autumn in this part of the country. But winter is getting tougher each year. In fact, I think it’s trying to start in September this year! Which wouldn’t be so bad except it never can be considered “gone” until Memorial Day. I’d love to live in a tropical locale. I’m sure I lived in one in a previous life.

What’s your favorite comfort food? Least favorite food?

Does coffee count as food? I count it as a necessity, since it’s the foundation of my personality. LOL I guess my fave comfort food is mashed potatoes. My least favorite food is liver. Or Brussels sprouts. Ack. I don’t even like typing the words!

What are three things you think we can all do to make the world a better place?

Laugh. Laugh at ourselves. And help others find something to laugh about each day.

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CHAT WITH CARLYLE LABUSCHAGNE

CarlyleLCarlyle Labuschagne is a South African Debut Author working her way into the hearts of international readers with her First Young Adult Dystopian Novel The Broken Destiny. She is not only an author but works as a Sales Rep and Marketing Manager by day. She holds a diploma in creative writing through the writing school at Collage SA. Loves to swim, fights for the trees, food lover who is driven by her passion for life. Carlyle writes for IU e-magazine India, an inspirational non-profit magazine that aims at inspiring the world through words. The drive behind her author career is healing through words. Carlyle is also the founder of the first annual book drive – Help build a library in Africa project.


“My goal as an Author is to touch people’s lives and help others love their differences and one another.”


Time to chat with Carlyle!

What is your latest book?

Upcoming release this November is Evanescent ~ A Broken Novel – book two in the trilogy.

I hear you have some very exciting news! Can you share it with us?

I have so much news to share I don’t know where to begin.

Recently I made front page headlines of City Press in Johannesburg I also have a great interview double spread in Get It magazine September 13 Issue. But more exciting than that is my new release and me heading to UtopYA 2014 next year!!! USA here I come. 🙂 Yesterday I got to hang out with my favorite rockstars Prime Circle who each got a signed copy of the book. Prime Circle is quoted in both The Broken Destiny and in Evanescent. I posted pics on my fan page. This was by far one of the highlights of being an author!

Evanescent

What are the special challenges in writing a series?

Tying all the elements together, making sure you don’t leave too much out, but not reveal too much either. The middle book of a trilogy has to be compared the middle child – the in between. Overwhelmed by the first child growing up so fast, and overwhelmed by the fact that the last child still needs so much, yet trying not to neglect the middle baby.

If you were to advertise your book on a bumper sticker, what would it say?

My all-time favorite slogan – summing up the entire trilogy.

Her Destiny is to rise above the fall.

BrokenDestiny

What else have you written?

I have started on a duolgy (two book set); this duo is more the supernatural genre.

I have plans for a Broken spin off – The Broken Diaries, from each characters point of view.

What do you think some of the greatest misconceptions about indie authors are?

That we are lazy! Really we have to do everything ourselves, and sometimes yes we might overlook a few things and get slaughtered for it.

How often do your characters surprise you by doing or saying something totally unexpected?

Umm, all the time! With my latest release coming up – Evanescent was written 6 times over with a full word count of 130K. I just could not force my main character to do what I wanted her to do. We have made piece now I had to let her be, no matter how much she annoyed me.

What part of writing a novel do you enjoy the most? The least?

The most would have to be the creating of scenes and stories. The least would have to be the stress that nothing is guaranteed and anything can go wrong, pre, post publishing there will always be ups and downs.

Some authors, like me, always write scenes in order. But I know some people write scenes out of order. How about you?

I start from word one and go until the draft is done – no planning – just go!

Is it important for you to know the ending of a book before you write it? The title?

The ending is just as a big surprise to my readers as to me – I have limited control. The title yes that is my first thing I need. I have no title, I have no theme to build around.

Some writers edit excessively as they write; others wait until a novel is finished to do the bulk of the editing. How about you?

I try to keep it as clean as possible, but the bulk gets done by working with a very great editor!

After working for a very long time on a novel, many authors get to a point where they lose their objectivity and feel unable to judge their own work. Has this ever happened to you? If so, what have you done about it?

Yes and no. I write what Id like to read, sometimes I am wow what a genius, others times I write thing I don’t want to, but is important to the book and I think “wow what nonsense is this?”

How important is the choosing of character names to you? Have you ever decided on a name and then changed it because it wasn’t right for the character?

Yes I have changed a name, but mostly it has to work for me from the beginning, or I will be haunted until it feels right.

Have you ever written characters that you truly despise?

I cannot answer that I might not live to see another day.

Do you have any advice for first-time authors?

Never give up. Always be true to who you are, there is no one worth impressing but yourself. Edit, edit, edit, edit, edit…

Don’t ever give up, take your time, let it flow and be happy 🙂

Get a website, build a biography, and start networking.

Can you tell us about your road to publication?

I decided to go through a company who assist in all the resources as an indie publisher. To keep my creative control. It hasn’t been easy, nor has it been very affordable, but I never quit – I make a plan, I push through all the times I wanted to break down and cry. Every author will find a fit.

Please, tell us about your experiences with social media. What are your favorite and least-favorite parts of it?

I have no least favorite parts – I am totally addicted and in awe of what it had given me. A means to reach everyone, a gift to connect with my fans/reads/friends all day every day. If not for them or social media I would not be where I am right now.

Do you have any grammatical pet peeves to share?

How much time do we have?

My first language is Afrikaans, so the English written word – I cannot begin to tell you, you should ask my editor – some words drive me insane! Affect and effect was one of them,  but I got it – eventually!

What do you like best about the books you read? What do you like least?

I love fantasy, Dystopian novels. I love intensity, uncertainty, thrilling fast-paced action.  I don’t like predictability. Girl meets boy, boy is a monster, blah blah blah.

How much research was involved in writing your book? How did you go about it?

Well I write about science, so some things I had to look up. I also write about Zulu Tribes and Ancient races – I use my friend Google! Sometimes it can take hours to get what I want, then I learn some pretty awesome things and I have to find a way to write it in, then I get mad because it takes away my story. And such is the life of a writer.

Do you allow others to read your work in progress, or do you keep it a secret until you’ve finished your first draft? Can you elaborate?

OOH no one but my editor reads it. Then it is published and then I wait for feedback. It works for me. I get too influenced by the thoughts and ideas of others. Perhaps I am too much of a control freak – MINE, She is all Mine! My precious.

Have you received reactions/feedback to your work that has surprised you? In what way?

Just about every review surprises me. Some will pick up things I had no idea I relayed, others are so intuitive it scares me. Some reviews make me feel sad. But I take all and make good with it! So thank you for each and every review and thought.

Do you write anything besides novels? Care to share?

I write for IUe magazine india – an inspirational magazine.

Were you “born to write” or did you discover your passion for writing later in life?

Born for it! I have been living in my head since a very young age. I know it used to bother my family and now it bugs my husband. LOL

Do you dread writing a synopsis for your novel as much as most writers do? Do you think writing a synopsis is inherently evil? Why?

So much to say so little space!

If you were to write a non-fiction book, what might it be about?

Teenage struggles.

Do you have any advice to a new author if they asked you whether to pursue the traditional route to publishing or to start out as an independent writer?

Go where your heart takes you. Each has its good and bad points. Most importantly you will learn from both routes, more than you ever thought possible.

What have you done to market your novel and what did you find the most effective? The least effective?

Market everywhere you possibly can. Nothing goes unseen.

Do you feel your latest book is your personal favorite or one of your previous novels?

I really do love the new release I love it a lot.

Having our work out there to be judged by strangers is often daunting for writers. Do you have any tips on handling a negative review?

Get over it! It hurts I know this, but it’s something you can work with. Its critique, use it.

Many authors do giveaways; have you found them a successful way to promote your book?

One of the most effective ways yes!

Have you been involved with the Kindle Direct Program? If yes, do you believe it’s worthwhile?

I have not actually. I have really no time in my day right now to explore and this is why I had to go through a small press company. I work, have young kids, a husband and I really do love my sleep! But I am sure as I figure out the ins and outs of time management there will be plenty I need to still do, until then Lisette I will keep you on my have to contact list!

We all know the old saying; you can’t judge a book by its cover. This is true. However, how much importance do you place on your book cover design?

The most importance! We shouldn’t but we do judge by the cover and title. In today’s world with so many resources at a stroke of a key – there is no reason to neglect a gorgeous cover, we all deserve one.

Every day brings forth new changes and shifts in the world of publishing. Any predictions about the future?

There is nowhere but up from here!

Do you have complete control over your characters or do they ever control you?

I do not control them as much as I’d like to. Especially Ava, but I got a way around that in book two! *winks*

How would you define your style of writing?

Intense, poetic and risk taking.

Do you miss spending time with your characters when you finish writing them?

Not always. I have my family to keep me well balanced!

Have you ever wished that you could bring a character to life? If so, which one and why?

Do I really have to choose? All of them, not so much the Villain we don’t need more of those.

A lot of authors are frustrated by readers who don’t understand how important reviews are? What would you say to a reader who doesn’t think his or her review matters?

I t matter more than you think, its not about popularity. An author learns and grows from the readers opinion. It helps that it assists in some publicity and sales too. We would not be if not for our readers and reviewers.

Do you ever suffer from writer’s block? If so, how do you get around it?

Yup. I simply walk away, take a drive. Go for a swim. If all else fails I take a day to just be without the clutter and it comes to me. If I am still stuck I force myself to get over it.

What genre have you never written in that you’d like to try?

I have not written romance, I’d like to try it out – someday.

Have you ever started out to write one book and ended up with something completely different?

All the time!

What do you know now that you wish you’d known five years ago?

More research. Before you choose a publisher, investigate the types of books, and their pricing. It all depends where you as an author wants to be.

Would you like to write a short poem for us?

How about a snippet from Evanescent?

Altered

Where you are not,

there you are bound to be found.

Be all of the not, until it is enough.

Live it all, lay yourself before it.

Taste what is not you.

Purge yourself, and let that be your alter;

your cross to bear,

find the love that becomes you in that truth.

When lost,

change all that you are.

And within those moments,

you will find who you are not.

Once you let it take you,

embrace all you do not want to be,

and never let go of who you found there.

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CHAT WITH JONATHAN MABERRY

Jonathan

Jonathan Maberry is a New York Times bestselling author, writing teacher, lecturer, and Marvel Comics writer. He is the author of many novels and nonfiction books. Jonathan is a frequent keynote speaker and guest of honor at writers’ conferences and genre conventions around the country.

Time to chat with Jonathan!

What is your latest book?

My latest novel is FIRE & ASH, a series of post-apocalyptic adventure for teens.

Is your recent book part of a series?

FIRE & ASH is the fourth and (possibly) final book of the ROT & RUIN series, which has won quite a few awards, including two Bram Stoker Awards and many reading awards for teens.

I hear you have some very exciting news! Can you share it with us?

The ROT & RUIN series has been optioned for film, and the producers plan to do all four books. I also have one of my adult novels, DEAD OF NIGHT, in development for film.

RotRuin

What are the special challenges in writing a series?

The biggest challenges in a series is providing for growth for each character. That’s crucial because a character’s growth is far more important than any high-concept plot point. The Rot & Ruin series has a moderately large cast, with six teenagers as central characters. Each of them has to grow in each book, and at the end they need to have completed a kind of emotional or psychological journey.

If you were to advertise your book on a bumper sticker, what would it say?

ZOMBIES WERE PEOPLE, TOO.

What else have you written?

I write fast and I write in different genres. My first three novels were the Pine Deep Trilogy set in the fictional Bucks County town of Pine Deep (GHOST ROAD BLUES, DEAD MAN’S SONG and BAD MOON RISING). Then I moved to weird-science thrillers featuring psychologically damaged hero Joe Ledger (PATIENT ZERO, THE DRAGON FACTORY, THE KING OF PLAGUES, ASSASSIN’S CODE, EXTINCTION MACHINE, and the forthcoming CODE ZERO and PREDATOR ONE). I wrote two books (so far) in an adult zombie apocalypse series (DEAD OF NIGHT and FALL OF NIGHT). I did a movie adaptation (THE WOLFMAN). And I have two new series debuting next year: a mystery-thriller series for older teens (WATCH OVER ME) and a middle-grade action-science fiction about aliens and monsters (THE NIGHTSIDERS).

Maberry3books

How often do your characters surprise you by doing or saying something totally unexpected?

Even though I plot my books and often writing the endings first, along the way characters transform from ideas to real people. They become three-dimensional, and subtle aspects of their personalities emerge. That’s always surprising and always welcome. When a character does not do this it’s a danger sign.

ExtinctionMachine

What part of writing a novel do you enjoy the most? The least?

I love the whole process from chewing on a raw idea all the way through the draft and revision phases.

Some authors, like me, always write scenes in order. But I know some people write scenes out of order. How about you?

I typically write the first chapter, then the last scenes, then I back up and aim at that ending. But, since I have an outline, I’m not restricted to linear writing. If I wanted to spice things up I’ll write whatever kind of scene appeals to me and then plug it into the manuscript. And, sometimes I’ll write out an entire subplot, end to end, then break it up and puzzle it into the larger manuscript.

Is it important for you to know the ending of a book before you write it? The title?

Always. Without that how can you plan for nuance, subtlety, and foreshadowing? How could you lay clues?

Some writers edit excessively as they write; others wait until a novel is finished to do the bulk of the editing. How about you?

I do not edit until I’ve finished a first draft. Then I edit in waves, picking different elements to focus on—voice, pace, chronology, dialogue, character relationships, etc.

After working for a very long time on a novel, many authors get to a point where they lose their objectivity and feel unable to judge their own work. Has this ever happened to you? If so, what have you done about it?

I soldier through those phases. If I have to I’ll write something bland and crappy just to get something down, then when I’m in a different headspace I go back and fix it.

How important is the choosing of character names to you? Have you ever decided on a name and then changed it because it wasn’t right for the character?

I pick my character names carefully. Though…there are times I’ve had contests to name characters. I also include some real-world people in my books.

Have you ever written characters that you truly despise?

I tend not to like my villains. They’re reprehensible.

Can you tell us about your road to publication?

I began pitching magazine articles while studying journalism at Temple University and was sold pretty regularly all the way into the late 1990s. Features, how-to stuff, columns, the works. In the early 90s I was approached to write some textbooks for the courses I was teaching at Temple, and for courses taught by a few colleagues. I did that and got a taste for writing books. In 2000 I went the small press route for some mass-market nonfiction books—three on martial arts, one on the folklore of vampires. Then in 2004 I started writing my first novel, GHOST ROAD BLUES, set in Bucks County. As soon as it was finished I went hunting for a literary agent, landed a good one, and that sent me sailing into the waters of mainstream publishing with major houses. I hit the New York Times bestseller list for the first time in 2010. Like all writers I racked up my share of rejections. I believe I could paper the entire state of North Dakota with rejection letters, but I don’t give up very easily. Or at all. I kept at it and now I’m in the wonderful position of being able to pick and choose projects. Fiction isn’t what I thought I’ve ever be writing, but it’s where I live now, and I couldn’t be happier.

Please, tell us about your experiences with social media. What are your favorite and least-favorite parts of it?

I’m all over social media. It drives the publishing world and any writer not invested in it is nuts. It not only allows the writer a measure of actual, useful control over the buzz and marketing of their projects, but allows for meaningful contact with peers and with readers. I write for fifty minutes out of each hour and then do ten minutes of social media. All day long. My favorite go-to places are Facebook (personal and group pages), Twitter, Goodreads, LinkedIn and Pinterest. But I’m on a bunch of others as well. If you budget your time it enhances your writing life rather than consumes it.

How much research is involved in writing your books? How do you go about it?

I was trained as a newspaper writer and spend decades writing features. That pretty much turned me into a research junkie. My thrillers, teen fiction and even my horror all have an enormous amount of research behind them. And all of my thrillers have a science theme—genetics, pandemics, etc. I do a lot of email interviews with experts all over the world, I read scads of scientific journals, and I cruise online sources. Usually I do a block of research before I start a project and then do ‘spot’ research along the way.

Have you received reactions/feedback to your work that has surprised you? In what way?

After my first teen novel—ROT & RUIN—debuted, I had a parent contact me to say that it was the first book his son read. Until then, his kid had been a reluctant reader. Now he wants to read and has become a “reader.” Since then I’ve heard similar stories from parents, educators, and librarians. The books in the series have won a number of awards, including several statewide awards where they were cited as “gateway” books. Books that open the door to reading for kids who might otherwise not crack a book. It’s staggering. It makes me want to cry. I don’t think anything in my writing career has had so profound an impact on me.

Do you write anything besides novels? Care to share?

I’ve been an active writer since my college days. I’ve sold 22 novels, 28 nonfiction books (on subjects ranging from women’s self-defense to the folklore of vampire legends), two plays, 1200 magazine feature articles, 3000 columns, as well as greeting cards, TV shows, dozens of short stories, and twelve collections of comic books. I also co-created a show for ABC Disney (ON THE SLAB), which, sadly, remains in development limbo. Currently I’m writing four novels per year in difference genre.

-4

Were you “born to write” or did you discover your passion for writing later in life?

I was born for it. Even before I could read or write I was telling stories using toys or drawings. I wrote for school papers, I wrote for fun, and now I write for a living. Writing is a defining characteristic. Everything else I’ve ever done, every job I worked at while building my career (bouncer, bodyguard, martial arts instructor, graphic artist, etc.) were side-effects; they were a means to—what is for me—the only acceptable end.

Are you an early bird writer or night owl? And do you have any must haves like coffee, chocolates, wine, music or something else?

I’m a nine-to-fiver. I get up and get to work. It’s my day job. I usually spend my mornings at a Starbucks and I write until about noon. Then I wander home and write through the afternoon in my home office. I take nights off to spend time with my family. I write part-time on weekends. I don’t ever take a full day off.

How would you define your style of writing?

I’m a humanist writer. Even in the midst of high-concept and big action, my writing is all about the personal experience. Although my subject matter is often very serious I include a lot of humor. And I don’t go in for emotional cheap shots.

Do you ever suffer from writer’s block? If so, how do you get around it?

I don’t believe writers block exists.  Writers who say that they encounter it most often are those who are trying too hard to make their first draft read like a polished final draft. They are imposing unrealistic expectations on themselves.  First drafts should be done quick and dirty—get the story out of your head and onto the page. That process taps into the part of us that is instinctive—we’re either storytellers or we’re not. Once the essential story is down, no matter how flawed and clunky, we then shift mental gears and approach the revision with an entirely different process. Craft.  That’s something we learn. The skills of craft include figurative and descriptive language, point of view, person, pace, timing, dialogue, metaphor, and so on.  These are things we learn in order to refine our stories.  Writers who understand that these are separate stages of the writing process never get writers block.

What genre have you never written in that you’d like to try?

I don’t know. Maybe romance from a guys’ perspective. Maybe a straight military story. Or a classic western. However I genre jump all the time. Not just in novels but in short stories. I’ve become a go-to guy for anthology editors because they know that I’ll try damn near anything. Over the last eight years I’ve written in a crazy number of genres. I did a Sherlock Holmes story (“The Adventure of the Greenbrier Ghost”); a children’s tale set in the land of Oz (“The Cobbler of Oz”); military science fiction (“Clean Sweeps”), historical horror (“The Death Poem of Sensei Otoro”), ghost stories (“Property Condemned”), apocalyptic science fiction (“Chokepoint”), dystopian existentialism (“The Wind Through the Fence”), psychological thriller (“Doctor Nine”), a serial killer story (“Saint John”), a story about Edgar Allan Poe’s character Auguste DuPin (“The Vanishing Assassin”), an Edgar Rice Burroughs tale (“The Death Song of Dwar Guntha”), a GI Joe techno-thriller (“Flint and Steel”), a western (“Red Dreams”), a noir urban fantasy (“Strip Search”), and others.

What do you know now that you wish you’d known five years ago?

I wish I knew how much I’d enjoy writing for teens. I would have jumped into that swimming pool sooner.

Where do you live now? If you had to move to another city/state/country, where might that be?

My wife, Sara Jo, and I live in Warrington, but we’re packing up to move across country to La Jolla in San Diego. It’s where I’ve wanted to live for a long time. The move is partly motivated by the weather out there (it’s always perfect), partly because our son, Sam, lives there; and partly because I have two films in development and it’s only a two-hour drive to L.A.

What’s your favorite comfort food? Least favorite food?

Coffee revs me up, chocolate soothes my soul. Spinach is my kryptonite.

Care to brag about your family?

I’m the black sheep of the family, so I’m not much a cheerleader for our clan. However my great grandfather—who I’m named after—was a great guy. John B. Maberry fought at the Battle of Gettysburg, captured the Southern flag, and was awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. Now, here’s the kicker. At that battle he captured a southern soldier named Dooley…who is my wife’s great grandfather. We learned this recently and it’s a weirdly stunning coincidence.

If you could have one skill that you don’t currently have, what would it be?

Rhythm. On the dance floor I am Whitey McWhitelson. I am, quite possibly, the worst dancer in the history of carbon-based life forms.

What was your favorite year of school? Why?

My favorite year was 1974 at Frankford High. Tenth grade. I made a slew of new friends, I fell in love for the first time, I joined a band, I did musical theater, I won several martial arts championships, I got my black belt, I grew my hair and beard long, I ran with a cool crowd of artists and singers, and I finally began to understand politics and art. It was the first of a lot of good years, and I remember every single day of it.

What might we be surprised to know about you?

That I used to do musical theater. I was in productions of Camelot, Jesus Christ Superstar, Fiddler on the Roof, How to Succeed in Business, 1776, A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum, and others. And I was in the traveling company for Godspell. That all ended when I got hit across the throat with a pool cue while working as a bouncer. I survived the hit, but my vocal chords were never quite the same. There are some who believe this was a good thing for the world of musical comedy.

What makes you angry?

Rude behavior. Pushes every last one of my buttons.

If you are a TV watcher, would you share the names of your favorite shows with us?

I vary between classics (Outer Limits, Twilight Zone, I Spy, Star Trek), modern comedies (Friends, Mad About You, Modern Family), and dramas (The Wire, Breaking Bad, Game of Thrones, Walking Dead, Orphan Black, Justified, Dexter, etc.).

What’s your favorite film of all times? Favorite book?

Favorite movies are THE WIZARD OF OZ, SINGING IN THE RAIN, and THE HAUNTING. Favorite books are SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES by Ray Bradbury, I AM LEGEND by Richard Matheson, PALE GRAY FOR GUILT by John D. MacDonald, FLETCH by Gregory McDonald, BLACK CHERRY BLUES by James Lee Burke and THE DANCERS AT THE END OF TIME by Michael Moorcock.

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CHAT WITH RYNE DOUGLAS PEARSON

RyneRyne Douglas Pearson is an accomplished novelist and screenwriter. Despite the often ‘dark’ nature of his novels and films, Pearson has been noted to have a ‘sweet, disarming quality’ by Entertainment Weekly-an accusation he has been unable to shake. He is addicted to diet soda and the sound of his children laughing. A west coast native, he lives in California with his wife, children, a Doberman Kelpie and a Beagle Vizsla.

Time to chat with Ryne!

What is your latest book?

My latest book, Cop Killer, is the first book in my new District One Thriller series. It tells the story of two detectives, Danny Owen and Jack James. One is a hard-charging young investigator who lives for the thrill of the chase. The other is a cool and methodical investigator with an almost legendary status in the department. When these two polar opposites are partnered there’s little time for them to reach some equilibrium of coexistence, as a brutal killer begins littering the city with bodies. But as Danny and Jack uncover the identity of this murderer, the lines of right and wrong begin to blur, leaving the partners to wonder just who is adversary, and who is ally.

CopKiller

What are the special challenges in writing a series?

The District One Thriller series will be the second series I’ve worked on, the other being my Art Jefferson Thriller series. The biggest challenge, for me, is not trying to lay too much groundwork too early. I already know the next three books in this series, but I don’t want to know everything. Being surprised it part of the fun of being a writer, and the temptation to begin threads in an earlier book that will play out in later books is strong, but I (mostly) resist.

What else have you written?

I’ve written eight other novels—All For One, Confessions, The Donzerly Light, Top Ten, Cloudburst. October’s Ghost, Capitol Punishment, and Simple Simon. I also write and publish short stories when the mood strikes me.

How often do your characters surprise you by doing or saying something totally unexpected?

All. The. Time.

Some authors, like me, always write scenes in order. But I know some people write scenes out of order. How about you?

I will write out of order when I get stuck somewhere. I find it’s best to keep the momentum going, even if that leaves a gap that needs to be addressed eventually.

Some writers edit excessively as they write; others wait until a novel is finished to do the bulk of the editing. How about you?

I edit continually. I can’t help it. I see something and have to fix it.

Have you ever written characters that you truly despise?

The ones you despise are the most fun. Writing the serial killer in Top Ten was a complete blast. What a bad, bad boy.

Do you have any advice for first-time authors?

Write a lot. Write like you’re gonna burn it. No one but you and the NSA will see what you write before you decide it’s crap and delete it, so write the crap. Crap leads to stuff that’s not crap.

Do you have any grammatical pet peeves to share?

I’m not a big grammar nazi. I tend to break rules if it helps the flow of a scene.

Do you write anything besides novels? Care to share?

I also write screenplays. I’ve worked in the film industry for thirteen years. The movie Knowing was based on my original screenplay, and I’ve done uncredited work on a number of films.

Do you feel your latest book is your personal favorite or one of your previous novels?

My previous novel All For One is my personal favorite. I just love writing kids, and, even in the horrific situation the story place them in, it was a joy to write them.

Having our work out there to be judged by strangers is often daunting for writers. Do you have any tips on handling a negative review?

Grow a thick skin and move on. Everyone is entitled to an opinion.

Trains, planes, automobiles, or boats?

Automobiles. I love to drive.

What’s your favorite comfort food? Least favorite food?

Lasagna is my favorite. Least favorite would be anything remotely resembling liver.

What music soothes your soul?

Hawaiian music is very, very soothing. I’m a big fan.

What’s your favorite film of all times? Favorite book?

Favorite film is It’s A Wonderful Life and favorite book is IT by Stephen King.

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CHAT WITH JENNY HILBOURNE

JennyHIlbourneJenny Hilborne is a native Brit, currently dividing her time between Southern California and her hometown of Swindon, England. With a background in real estate and the finance industry, she is the author of four published mysteries and thrillers.

Time to chat with Jenny!

What is your latest book?

My latest book is a psychological thriller titled Stone Cold. It’s set in the idyllic English Cotswolds, where murder is rare. A double murder is shocking.

Is your recent book part of a series?

While Stone Cold was written as a stand alone, I haven’t ruled out the possibility of a sequel, based on reader feedback.

What else have you written?

Madness And Murder is my debut novel, and a psychological thriller set in San Francisco. It features homicide inspector Mac Jackson who, by popular demand, returns in my 3rd suspense Hide And Seek. I’ve also written another San Francisco based suspense titled No Alibi.

How often do your characters surprise you by doing or saying something totally unexpected?

All the time. All of my books have gone in directions different to those I’d originally intended. While it makes the writing process much harder, it strengthens the stories. If I’m surprised by what my characters do and say, I’m sure my readers will be, too.

Some authors, like me, always write scenes in order. But I know some authors write scenes out of order. How about you?

I’m a panster. As I don’t plot, the scenes are written in order. That’s not to say I don’t juggle them in the edits. In the editing of Madness And Murder, chapter fourteen eventually became chapter one.

Is it important for you to know the ending of a book before you write it? The title?

I rarely know the ending until I get there. If I have an idea of how a book will end, it will usually change before I get to it. As for the title, I try to establish that as early as possible. Working on an untitled piece is difficult.

How important is the choosing of character names to you? Have you ever decided on a name and then changed it because it wasn’t right for the character?

I find stellar names in my spam folder and have used a few of them for my characters. I’ve occasionally changed names where it didn’t suit the personality. At the request of a non-profit organization, I recently donated a character name with all the proceeds going to help improve lives of those with disabilities. It was a great cause and the character name the winner chose will be featured in my upcoming paranormal thriller.

What do you like best about the books you read? What do you like least?

As a reader, I prefer plot-based fiction and mostly enjoy dark and gritty thrillers. My favorites are the ones where the hero/heroine is hiding their own dark secrets, is less than perfect and not always likeable. I find them more realistic. Anything too saccharine is a turnoff for me. What I least like reading in thrillers is romance. It slows the story and often makes me cringe.

How much research was involved in writing your book? How did you go about it?

For Stone Cold, I spent six months in the UK and did a lot of research out in the field rather than online. It was refreshing. I drove the same routes the characters take in the book, visited the graveyard with the broken gate where Mara learns the secret behind the forgotten grave, and spent time with local police at the police station and inside the cells to get a real feel for the criminal side of life.

Have you received reactions/feedback to your work that has surprised you? In what way?

Feedback from my readers often surprises me. I write for pleasure. Apart from rooting for the underdog, I never attempt to deliver any kind of message in my work, so it surprises me when readers respond with what they picked up. For Madness And Murder, readers made me aware the book has a theme of second chances running through it. I was completely unaware.

Where do you live now? If you had to move to another city/state/country, where might that be?

Currently, I split my time between San Diego and my hometown of Swindon in the south west of England. If I were to live elsewhere, it would be San Francisco or New Zealand; San Fran for the research and NZ because traffic doesn’t stink like it does here.

If you could have one skill that you don’t currently have, what would it be?

I wish I could sing, or play a musical instrument. A jam session by an open fire always seems like such a great way to spend an evening.

What makes you angry?

Rudeness, stupidity, and cruelty. In any order.

If you are a TV watcher, would you share the names of your favorite shows with us?

I confess to watching Big Brother, Survivor, and Snapped.

Have you ever walked out of a movie? If so, what was it?

I walked out of Platoon. It was too graphic. The image of violent death is disturbing.

If you could add a room onto your current home, what would you put in it?

A library room with wall-to-wall books and a comfy leather chair.

 

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CHAT WITH ERIC B. THOMASMA

Eric

Eric B. Thomasma was born and raised in West Michigan, USA.
He still lives in the area with his wife of 35 years, Therese, and
together they raised two sons, Eric Jr. and Nicholas. Eric spent most
of his adult life working as an electrician and service technician in the
telecommunications industry, with side interests in computers and
video production.

Time to chat with Eric!

I hear you have some very exciting news! Can you share it with us?

My children’s book, The Wizards of the Body Shop, was recently selected for the 2013 KART Kids Book List Award. The Kids Are Readers Too (KART) Foundation is the private philanthropy division of PediNatural®, dedicated to children’s literacy. This is the second time one of my books has been selected for the list. My first children’s book, Sam And The Dragon, was chosen for the 2011/2012 award.

What is your latest book?

My most recently released book is Yeti In The Freezer. A children’s book about a brother and sister that come home from school and discover they have a new refrigerator that has an ice maker. But when they try to take ice out, the ice maker growls and throws ice chunks at them. Turns out this ice maker isn’t too happy about people taking his ice without so much as a thank you.

Yeti

What else have you written?

In addition to the children’s books already mentioned, I have one more, Billy’s Family. It’s a story about an only child that wishes he had a big family, but learns that family includes far more than just Mommy and Daddy. It’s designed to expose kids to some of the terms and concepts used in modern genealogy.

I also write novels for grown-ups. I’m nearly finished with the fourth book in my Sci-Fi series, SEAMS16. The first two books in the series, SEAMS16: A New Home and SEAMS16: Arrival, follow Charlie and Susan Samplin as they move to, and make their lives on, the Space Equipment Authority’s Maintenance Station number 16 (SEAMS16). With the third novel, And So It Begins…, I took a leap back in time to the beginnings of the society that SEAMS16 comes from. It takes place roughly 1000 years before the station is built, so it’s not really a SEAMS16 novel, but it is part of the series. It’s designed as a standalone story so it can be read out of order without relying on, or spoiling, the first two. The novel I’m currently working on, as yet untitled, returns to the station and the lives of Charlie and Susan. It picks up about a month after Arrival leaves off, and includes family dynamics, religion, politics, espionage, kidnapping, intrigue, action, and more.

And so it begins

How often do your characters surprise you by doing or saying something totally unexpected?

Very often! I am what’s referred to as a “pantser”, meaning I write by the seat of my pants. This is opposed to a “plotter” who carefully outlines the story before writing the first word. I tried that with my first novel but by the end of the first chapter the story no longer bore any resemblance to the outline, so I ditched it and have been a pantser ever since. It’s a fun way to write because you’re entertained by the story as you write it, but it can also be challenging without a clear view of where the story is going or how it’s going to end.

Some writers edit excessively as they write; others wait until a novel is finished to do the bulk of the editing. How about you?

I tend to edit as I go. Oftentimes the story takes an unexpected direction that either conflicts with an earlier part of the story, or makes it irrelevant. Sometimes, the conflict can be resolved in subsequent chapters and makes the story more interesting. But other times, the story needs to be rewritten to remove the conflicting or irrelevant information. Sometimes it’s as simple as changing a few words here and there, but other times a whole chapter needs to be scrapped and rewritten.

How important is the choosing of character names to you? Have you ever decided on a name and then changed it because it wasn’t right for the character?

I personally don’t think names define personality. I’ve met too many people that share the same name, but are polar opposites, so I can’t say I put a lot of research or thought into a character’s name. In most cases, I just use whatever the character tells me his or her (or its) name is. But I did once change an alien character’s name because it sounded too close to the name used for a baby, and I didn’t want anyone to get the impression that the baby was named after the alien. As the narrator in my stories, I sometimes don’t even know the name of a character until another character says it. I remember referring to one character as “the blonde” for a whole chapter before I found out her name.

How much research was involved in writing your book? How did you go about it?

The amount of research varies for each book. All of my books are fiction, and some people think I don’t have to do much research since I’m just “making stuff up”, but that just isn’t the case. Even made up stuff has to have a connection to reality to be believable. And the length of a book has little to do with how much research is required. I’ve found that sometimes a children’s book requires as much research as a novel. For example:

For my children’s book, Billy’s Family, I had to do research on modern genealogy to gain a better understanding of second cousins, third cousins, and cousins-once-removed. I had heard the terms all of my life, but never really understood them. And in questioning some of the people I’d heard use those terms, they didn’t really understand them either. They knew that so-and-so is a second cousin-once-removed, but when pressed they didn’t know the relationship that makes so-and-so a second cousin-once-removed.

For my novel, And So It Begins…, I had to research what happens as a spaceship enters an Earth-like atmosphere. This is no longer speculation. We’ve been to space and we know what happens, so it’s important to understand it before writing about it. That doesn’t necessarily mean you have to follow the rules, but you have to understand what the rules are before you bend them, or you risk losing credibility.

In both cases, it took hours of research to be able to properly represent the events for what will be read through in just a few moments.

When your story takes place on a space station, field research is not really an option. (But how cool would that be?) So I primarily have to rely on the internet for my research. There is information out there on nearly every subject, for nearly every purpose. Of course, there’s a lot of misinformation as well, so I try to find multiple sources for the information and do cross-referencing. I do searches using different search engines and it’s amazing the different results that can come up depending on the search engine used. I’m not going to mention names because they all have their strengths and weaknesses. I just think it’s important to use more than one when researching a subject.

It takes time and effort to sort through and determine which is good information and which is bad, and which is just a rehash of someone else’s work, but it’s worth it. I once had someone thank me for making him sound like an expert in a discussion. Imagine if the information I’d used was wrong. Instead of thanking me, he’d have cursed me for making him look like a fool.

Having our work out there to be judged by strangers is often daunting for writers. Do you have any tips on handling a negative review?

It’s important to remember that reviews are written for readers, not writers. The best course of action is to not read reviews at all, so there’s nothing to handle. But since we writers are human and tend to be a curious lot, few of us are capable of following that advice. That includes me, so even though reviews aren’t written for me, the author, here is how I approach them. Don’t do anything publicly. Don’t reply to the review. Don’t try to explain what you were thinking. Don’t point out where the reader is wrong, or missed the point. Don’t run to social media and whine about it. Don’t even try to be gracious and thank them for their review. None of it will reflect positively with other readers. My tip for handling a negative review is to punch your pillow, have a drink, cry, rant, pray, search your soul, do whatever you do to release your frustrations, but do it in private.

From a philosophical standpoint, I like that you phrased the question as “negative” rather than “bad” because to me, there is a difference. My definition of a bad review is one that does not explain why the reader formed the opinion they did. When a reviewer writes, “I love it, I love it, I LOVE it. You HAVE to read this book!” it may inspire other readers to give it a try, but there’s nothing there I can use. Likewise, if a review says, “This book sucks! Don’t waste your time.” Other readers might give it a pass, or it might make them wonder just how bad it could be, but either way there’s nothing there for me. A bad review can be positive or negative, but while it may it be helpful to other readers, it offers nothing to me as a writer and so I dismiss it as nothing more than one readers opinion.

A good review can also be positive or negative, but it will contain information that can be used to improve my writing. There are often lessons to be learned from the person who didn’t like the story, but is generous enough to explain why, even if they deliver it in what appears to be a mean-spirited way. I take whatever information from the review I can use to help improve my craft, and leave the rest alone.

A lot of authors are frustrated by readers who don’t understand how important reviews are? What would you say to a reader who doesn’t think his or her review matters?

Writers want reviews because readers telling readers about the book is the primary reason books sell. Not commercials, not book signings, not awards, and not posters on the wall; it’s readers telling readers. And that’s what a review is. A book with a lot of reviews is generally more interesting than a book with few or no reviews, regardless of the content of the reviews. Even books with a high number of negative reviews draw interest, and interest is the author’s best friend. But that offers very little incentive for readers to write them.

Fortunately for writers, reviews are important to readers too. I’ve heard many reasons sited, but most of them boil down to the fact that there is limited time available for reading, and we don’t want to waste it on books we won’t like. A flashy cover and attractive blurb may catch our interest, but how many times have you been disappointed by a book that looked interesting? The better way to know a book without actually reading it is through reviews. Discussion is what brings a book to a reader’s attention, and reviews are nothing more than a discussion in written form. Everyone that writes a review contributes to the discussion and is helping their fellow readers make better decisions about their reading material. It makes little difference whether the review is positive or negative because what some find off-putting, others find attractive. You may think that your review doesn’t matter, but every contribution increases the pool of knowledge. Have courage to be the lone voice, bucking the trend, because a discussion is moot without an opposing point of view. But even if your voice echoes what others have said, there is strength and reassurance in numbers. Continue the discussion because without reviews, decisions are made in ignorance. And history shows that good decisions are seldom made in ignorance.

Have you been involved with the Kindle Direct Publishing Select program?

No.

I think it’s a well thought out strategy for Amazon to grow its dominance in the marketplace and as some of my writer friends can attest, the rewards for the authors who decide to participate can be substantial.

But for me, the exclusivity clause of Select as well as some of the other restrictions are unacceptable. There are many readers who I think would be interested in my books, who don’t have Kindles, or for reasons of their own don’t want to buy from Amazon. I believe in allowing readers that choice, and the Select program is designed to take it away, both in the short term and the long term.

Now don’t get me wrong. I don’t hold any ill will towards anyone involved in the program. I’m quite happy with my dealings with Amazon and their print subsidy, CreateSpace. And I still consider the writers participating in the program to be my friends. But the Select program is not for me.

We all know the old saying; you can’t judge a book by its cover. This is true. However, how much importance do you place on your book cover design?

I place a great deal of importance on the cover design, but I don’t think it’s the same way that publishers do. See, my covers have all been designed by my brother Lanin, who also does the illustrations for my children’s books. I love the covers he has done and I’m proud to display them. But it has been suggested that I might gain more sales with a different cover design, so I’ve been toying with the idea of changing the SEAMS16 series covers. Perhaps when my current work in progress is ready for publishing I’ll look at redesigning the whole series using a common pattern, but for now I’ll keep them as they are.

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CHAT WITH CELIA BONADUCE

CeliaBonaduce

Currently a Field Producer on HGTV’s House Hunters, Celia Bonaduce has covered a lot of ground in TV programming. Her credits include field-producing ABC’s Extreme Makeover: Home Edition to writing for many of Nickelodeon’s animated series, including Hey, Arnold and Chalkzone.  An avid reader, entering the world of books has always been a lifelong ambition. Kensington eBooks’s The Merchant of Venice Beach, first in The Venice Beach Romances, was just published on August 1st.

Time to chat with Celia!

What is your latest book and is your recent book part of a series?

I’ve written a series of contemporary romances called The Venice Beach Romance books. The first, The Merchant of Venice Beach, was published by Kensington eBooks on August 1st.  The second, A Comedy of Erinn, will hit cyberspace on September 19th.  A third book is still in the works.

CeliaMerchant

How often do your characters surprise you by doing or saying something totally unexpected? 

I was raised by writers – my mother and father were both TV comedy writers and they had different opinions about whether a character was allowed to “lead his or her own life.” My mom thought “yes” but my dad was adamant that you had to take control or some rogue character would run off with your storyline. For years, I did it my father’s way, but then realized I was really missing out on where the characters might go if left to their own devices. So, I started giving them some leeway. Mother knows best.

Is it important for you to know the ending of a book before you write it?

I do think it’s very important to have a solid beginning, middle and end before you start actually writing. That’s not to say that the ending can’t change, but you need to be going somewhere. It’s like driving. If you are going to San Francisco from Los Angeles, you need to at least know you’re going north and about how long it will take. You can make adjustments as you go, but you still hope to end up at the Golden Gate Bridge – unless your trip reveals you might be happier in Seattle.

Some writers edit excessively as they write; others wait until a novel is finished to do the bulk of the editing. How about you?

I am a compulsive editor.  I edit every morning before I move forward.  By the time I am finished, I have very little rewriting to do…except for THOUSANDS of copy-editing mistakes.

Can you tell us about your road to publication?

My road to publication was long. I really wanted to go the traditional route, since many of my self-published friends seem to hit a wall at some point. I knew nobody in the publishing world, so I found a list of agents online and, one by one, sent them my sample pages. It took me three years to get an agent and one year to find a publisher.

How much research was involved in writing your book? How did you go about it?

I research as avoidance. Since I write contemporary romance and the books take place in my hometown of Santa Monica and our southern neighbor, Venice Beach, I didn’t really need to do a ton of research. But the books center around a funky teashop – so I did a ton of research on teas. At one point, the teashop gets remodeled, and I researched construction and design. I love to just start poking around the internet.

When I decided to write a book about a woman who falls in love with her no-good dance instructor (The Merchant of Venice Beach), I decided I should take dance lessons since I had no idea what that world was like. I became obsessed with dance and danced four days a week! When I started traveling for House Hunters, I had to cut back and I really miss the rush of Salsa, Swing and Tango!

Do you allow others to read your work in progress, or do you keep it a secret until you’ve finished your first draft? Can you elaborate?

I have a group of trusted readers and I wait until I have a first draft.  Growing up with writing parents, it used to drive me crazy when my dad would tell me page by page what he had written and then he’d present me with the completed script for critique. I already knew the entire plot, so couldn’t really evaluate it. My father passed away many years ago but my mom continues to be my prize “evaluator.” I try hard not to tell her what I’ve written every day.

We all know the old saying; you can’t judge a book by its cover. This is true. However, how much importance do you place on your book cover design?

One thing about having a big House publish your book is that they design your covers and they might not have been what you had in mind.  Because my book revolves around a teashop, I pictured a cover sort of like Crooked Moon or Fried Green Tomatoes, so I was shocked when Kensington presented me with this super sexy cover! We discussed it and they said that they were sure their audiences would respond to the cover they designed. They are a very successful company and I figured, “Well, you’re the experts.”

Do you ever suffer from writer’s block? If so, how do you get around it?

I imagine all writers suffer from writer’s block at one time or another. I actually went to a hypnotist and it worked! I highly recommend it!

Where do you live now? If you had to move to another city/state/country, where might that be?

I travel for a living, and see a different city every other week on House Hunters. I always try to imagine myself living other places, and while I fancy that I could be happy living in Italy, England or some parts of the USA, when I come home to Santa Monica, California, I know I am where I should be. I love it here.

What are the most important traits you look for in a friend?

I am a very loyal friend and try to stay in touch with people. But my schedule in not conducive to friendship.  I’m on the road a ton, so, the trait I look for in a friend is PATIENCE.

If you could have one skill that you don’t currently have, what would it be?

I would love to play the piano and speak Italian fluently.  (I know those are two skills and they are both learnable, so it is maddening that I haven’t done either.)

What might we be surprised to know about you?

I am a very good seamstress and got my first producer-job at HGTV because I could sew, not because I could produce.

If you could add a room onto your current home, what would you put in it?

A sewing room, because I make a HUGE mess when I’m making a full-sized quilt (which I do whenever I can).  Also, since I don’t play the piano, I don’t need a music room.

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CHAT WITH TAYLOR EVAN FULKS

TaylorFulks

Taylor Evan Fulks is a practicing Registered Nurse First Assistant, specializing in open heart surgery to pay the bills. She’s also a wife, a mother of two very challenging (in a good way) teenage daughters, and an ardent “nocturnal gardener” due to her ongoing battle with skin cancer. She resides in a quaint little town in Southern Ohio, along the banks of the Ohio River.

Time to chat with Taylor!

What is your latest book?

Hello everyone! I’m Taylor Evan Fulks, author of My Prison Without Bars: The Journey of a Damaged Woman to Someplace Normal. Whew! That’s quite a mouthful! My debut novel is based on a true story…my story. It’s a dark, disturbing and very graphic account of my life as a survivor (I really hate that term…I prefer warrior) of Child Sexual Abuse.

You have written about deeply traumatic experiences that affect millions of people yet are not always understood or discussed openly. How did you reach a place within yourself where you were able to share your past?

Actually, I didn’t set out to write this particular book at all. I wanted to be a romance writer. I’m a voracious reader! I’ve read over seven hundred books since 2007, so I flippantly reasoned, “How hard can it be?” I’m also a storyteller, though my audience is listening to me ramble on and watching me gesticulate with my hands (I’d explode if you tied them behind my back) rather than reading my words. I sat down to write a romance that had been percolating in my head but found I couldn’t write. I hadn’t lost my muse…I didn’t have one. All I could hear was a little girl inside my head, inside of me, begging for a voice. So, I finally listened.

In the beginning, I wrote about the abuse I endured, tentatively, innocuously, without detail or description, leaving it to the reader’s imagination as to the horror a child suffers at the hands of an abuser. I was completing chapter sixteen of my forty chapter novel when the Penn State, Jerry Sandusky child abuse scandal broke into the national headlines.  In the beginning, I was elated, thrilled with the stance the University and the NCAA took in regards to Joe Paterno’s culpability, stripping him of his awards and accolades. They even removed a statue of him from the University campus. I was thrilled with the arrest and prosecution of Jerry Sandusky, now a convicted pedophile.

I watched like a hawk for stories from the victims, some quite young. But all I saw were grossly edited snippets of interviews that minimized the severity and sometimes questioned the validity of the abuse. Then the day of reckoning came…a day that altered my life forever. I watched a group of students, administrators and staff from Penn State stand in front of a TV camera and cry foul! One middle-age man said right into the camera with unflinching eyes, “The punishment is too harsh for the crime!”

I have known rage in my life, feelings of anger so toxic it’s frightening, but I had never amassed and embraced this level of insanity. I was possessed! I didn’t think. I didn’t process or calculate what I was about to do. I just reacted.

I shredded the first eight chapters of my novel and sat down to begin again…this time, in graphic detail. I didn’t consciously think through the consequences of telling my story, at least the consequences to me personally. I did discuss it with my daughters, assuring them I wouldn’t publish if they were the least bit against it. Both girls came at me with a resounding “Go for it, Mom!”

Raw, blatant honesty became my mission statement!

The words poured out of me like a faucet with a busted valve. I wrote with rage and fury, letting the words and experiences flow from the depths of my soul. I wrote until my hand cramped and my fingers were numb…then I cried. I cried for myself and then for all the innocent children that are lost and have no voice. I cried in Shame…

For good or bad, I laid myself naked and exposed to the world (or at least to the few friends that I thought would actually read my book). I bared myself before the world to be judged, criticized and condemned.  I left nothing to the imagination…I take the reader far beyond what is comfortable and far beyond what most would consider inappropriate.

This is as naked and exposed as I’ll ever be…

PrisonWOBars

On your website, you say that you have always been struck dumb and quite frankly amazed, by the concealed and often guarded reporting of sexual abuse. Can you talk more about this?

It’s a sad truth. That which we fear, that which we don’t understand, we shun. Society and abusers hone and cultivate victims of child sexual abuse into becoming gatekeepers of secrecy. It’s a shameful, taboo subject that dates back to biblical times, yet we don’t talk about it. We don’t like things that push the envelope, cross boundaries or make us uncomfortable. We like neat and tidy.

I was introduced to Shame at a very young age…I believe I was six at the time. Shame was that little voice in my head telling me that what was happening to me was wrong. Because you see, abusers seclude their victims, putting them in solitary confinement with no connection to the norms of society or the ways of the outside world. Children learn what they live. Had I not met Shame, not been introduced to the “wrongness” of the life I lived, the cycle would have probably continued with me…for without Shame, we know no better.

Child Sexual Abuse is Shameful in the minds of most people in society. It’s something very hard to wrap your mind around. The mind is a compensatory organ, a flesh and blood computer if you will, allowing a plethora of knowledge and feeling to flow through its pathways…yet, always filtering and camouflaging some things, buffering and blocking others, and shutting off completely when it’s unable to handle or compute. In other words, it makes sure the soul can handle the download of images (real or perceived) and information. And therein lays the problem with Child Sexual Abuse. We hear those three words and our minds will only allow us to imagine so far before we filter, buffer, block, or completely shut off the things too unpleasant to handle. My mission became clear…I had to take the reader to that dark, dismal, shameful place no one ever talks about, and with written words…make them feel.

I know a place so dark that the only light is the knowledge I survived last night. I know a place so shameful, that the only hope in my life is surviving tonight, and the next night, and the next…

Was I too descriptive? Probably. Was I too graphic? Definitely! But I saw no other way to lead readers through my journey…the journey of a lost and forgotten child that had no voice, no protector, no way out. I do not apologize for the subject matter or the way I wrote it (I hate to sound arrogant…I’m not, I swear). My job as a writer in this instance is to provide you the reader, a literary video clip for your mind to grasp and ultimately making you feel. If you come away from my book with an inkling of what it’s like to have no choices, no freedom and no safety as a defenseless child, well then…I’ve done my job. By the same token, I also believe in full disclosure. To the horror and angst of my editor, I put a “Note from the Author” missive on the first page of my book warning readers of the descriptive and graphic nature. My editor said it would kill my sales. Maybe so…but I can sleep soundly at night.

What kind of feedback have you received after writing My Prison Without Bars?

My novel to date has done very well. On Amazon it has over 120~ 5 star reviews and is ranked in the Top 25 in two categories for twenty weeks. On Goodreads my book maintains a 4.5 rating. All of this is fantastic and quite shocking to me. But the greatest blessings in all of this are the emails, Twitter messages, and Facebook messages I’ve received from people wanting to share their horror stories, some of whom have never told a soul. The honesty and trust these wonderful readers have bestowed upon me is far greater and more humbling than any 5-star reviews I’ve gotten thus far.

My community and my colleagues have embraced me with so much love and support. It’s funny, I was so afraid I would have to hang my head in shame, eyes downcast after everyone read my book…I work in the operating room with a mask on my face…only my eyes showing. I pondered how in the world I was going to pull that one off.

Can you tell us about your road to publication?

Ah well…let’s just say that traditional publishers are not ready for edgy, controversial or taboo topics. I contacted five publishing houses (three big ones and two smaller houses) that were taking open submissions. I even contacted TWCS~ The Writer’s Coffee Shop Publishing House, original publisher of The Fifty Shades Trilogy.  I wasn’t even given the chance to submit. The submission requirements for all these Houses declined my topic, listing it with subjects like Child Porn, bestiality, and necrophilia. This made me furious, but it also galvanized me to get my book out there.

I spent two months researching self-publishing and my options. I went with Amazon’s Createspace and I’m very proud of the product I’ve published.

Do you allow others to read your work in progress, or do you keep it a secret until you’ve finished your first draft? Can you elaborate?

It’s ironic you ask this question. When I started my book I used a speech recognition program to type my MS. I’m not a typist…I do open heart surgery. Anyway, you have to verbalize everything; punctuation, paragraphs, quotations etc… I could never get a feel for the ebb and flow of my writing. Was it a good story? Did it read like a novel, or like a book report?

So, I asked four of my closest friends at work to proofread my MS a chapter at a time as I completed them. They were very positive and encouraged me to continue. Then Penn State occurred and subsequently my rewrite. I brought those pages in, handed them to the girls and promptly walked away. I came back to the locker room an hour later and was blown away. All four women were in tears, looking at me with what can only be described as “awe.” The scene is permanently etched in my mind. The initial encouragement to write my story changed to vehement demands to finish it and publish. I sat down next to them and we all cried.

Having our work out there to be judged by strangers is often daunting for writers. Do you have any tips on handling a negative review?

First of all, I don’t believe ANY BOOK should receive a review lower than a 3 star rating. The sheer effort to write, edit, format, publish and market the book should warrant 3 stars.

I could give the pat answer~ Ignore it, but we all know as authors, we don’t. I’ve had three 1 star reviews so far (knock on wood), one on Amazon and two on Goodreads. All three were vicious and hurtful, telling the world that what I wrote couldn’t have happened. Between Amazon and Goodreads I have over 200~ 4 and 5 star reviews. I choose to go with the majority.

The world is full of “not very nice” people whether they’re a reader giving a bad review, or a co-worker that you’d love to throttle. My advice is to allow yourself to feel the hurt for a day, two if need be, then dust off and seek the positive. You can’t please everyone…

We all know the old saying; you can’t judge a book by its cover. This is true. However, how much importance do you place on your book cover design?

You can judge my book by its cover…that was my intention when I designed it. I wanted no doubt that the reader could tell exactly what they were about to read.

I entered a cover contest on a rather large and popular blog. I waited anxiously for two months for the results. I came in second to last out of sixty-four entries and the judges posted a comment next to my cover that said, “This is disturbing and really very ‘creepy.’” Well, to say I was crushed is a gross understatement! For two days I was undesirable to live with. Then, the little girl inside of me said, “You won dummy! That’s what we were going for…”

What do you know now that you wish you’d known five years ago?

I wish I had known the power of healing is in the TELLING! I’ve lived in shame and secrecy for four decades believing I wasn’t worthy of love, of acceptance or anything better. I lived in a state of suppressed rage…for my abuser, for my faults and mostly toward my mother. In telling my story, I have found acceptance, not necessarily from others, but acceptance of me, by me. My life is what it is. My past is just that…my past. I don’t live there anymore. It’s time to move on.

Care to brag about your family?

Ah…my favorite topic! I’ve been blessed with two of the loveliest daughters a mother could ask for. My oldest daughter is twenty-one and entering her first year of nursing school at Marshall University in Huntington, West Virginia. She’s my worrier, my pleaser and very much a “momma’s girl.”

My youngest daughter is seventeen and my social butterfly. She actually set me up with social media. She found it amusing when she set me up on Twitter, without instructions I might add, and told me to have at it! She and eleven of her friends (ages 18 and under) were my first followers. She got a kick out of watching me thank myself for the follow and thank myself for the retweet for the first three weeks I was on twitter. I got a kick out of confiscating her car keys and keeping them for the next three weeks after I finally figured out what I was doing wrong.

She will be starting her senior year of high school this fall and hopes to get a scholarship to a Division 1 college to play softball. She has a 64 mph fastball and a curveball that breaks 9 inches off the plate. She is definitely a “daddy’s girl.”

What music soothes your soul?

This will sound odd, but I love Classic Rock! The louder the better! If you can’t feel it rattle your bones, it’s not loud enough, and not worth listening to. Both my girls were raised listening to it. They prefer Zeppelin and Fleetwood Mac to the noise that’s on the radio nowadays. It takes me to a good place in my head…it drowns out bad thoughts and stirs as much as it soothes my soul.

What’s your favorite film of all times? Favorite book?

My favorite movie would have to be Braveheart with Mel Gibson. I know, I know, it’s so GRAPHIC! I love things, stories, and people that push the boundaries. I lived so many years with my feelings sequestered that now, I’m all about passion. I want things to make me feel, make me ponder long after it’s over and take my breath away! This movie does all of these for me.

My favorite book, hands down, is the Outlander Series (eight books) by Diana Gabaldon. In my opinion, it is the greatest love story ever written. I reread all eight books once a year. It’s time travel, historical fiction and a delicious love story all in one. I highly recommend it! I rate it 10 stars!

Well, I believe my time is up. I want to thank Lisette’s Writers’ Chateau for graciously allowing me to guest blog today. I’m truly honored and humbled.

I’m proud to say the little girl inside my book (inside of me) is fine…I protect her now. She’s finally found her voice…

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