HOW CHARLEY DAVIDSON CHANGED MY LIFE

Inspiration

Since my first encounter with Kim Harrison‘s Rachel Morgan, I’ve loved urban fantasy with a passion. I easily got through a few books a week, even straying into paranormal romance with the Black Dagger Brotherhood. I was looking foremost for plot. Lots of plot. A nice premise and a hot romance means jack all without action that lets readers experience the premise and romance. Which is not to say I didn’t also want a nice premise and a hot romance. Hey, I’m no more than human underneath this incredibly cool and witty exterior.

When I took up writing again, these books influenced my genre and the way I structure my books. Yet my writing was always a little…different. No matter how much effort I pumped into emulating my idols, my voice kept veering into the humorous. I never really shared my stories with anyone. Why bother? They wouldn’t “get it.”

My first Eureka

My first Eureka came when I discovered Jennifer Rardin’s Jaz Parks series. Here was an author who wasn’t afraid of characters who weren’t just kick-butt, but also smart-mouthed. She gave me hope.

Then Darynda Jones published First Grave on the Right, and my life changed. How did this woman write like me? Had she somehow set up shop in my brain when I wasn’t paying attention?

This wasn’t a humble thought, I admit. It was a visceral one, born out of deep admiration for the author. Reading Charley Davidson’s adventures was like a warm welcome-home party. If Charley made it, perhaps my voice might have a market after all. I threw myself into writing more than ever and took writing courses to get better. I discovered Margie Lawson, a wonderful teacher who pushed me to give my best. And she liked my stuff. When she remarked I was channelling Darynda Jones in my writing, I was overjoyed. Someone else had noticed the similarity. Woot! After that, the comparisons flooded in.

Over the months, however, my attitude changed. Now I’d found more confidence, and people got into my writing, I wanted to be recognized as my own person. Yet I struggled to move out of Darynda Jones’s shadow. Of course it didn’t help I devoured each new Charley Davidson book with great appetite, which in turn influenced me even more, as all great books do. Sure, we shared a sense of humor. But as for the rest, our books were totally different. What was going on?

My second Eureka

After a while I went back to my initial state of being reluctant to share my work. One morning while pottering about the house, a thought struck me.

My writing style, or voice, couldn’t be changed. Why would I want to? It’s what makes writing enjoyable, and is only part of what makes a book. After all, Charley Davison was more than just a sense of humor. She’s smart, talented, resourceful and finds her way through imaginative problems. If I made my writing about my voice, it was all people would ever take away from it. I understood that, if you have a strong voice, you needed a counter-balance. Something that would anchor that voice to the story. So, during my hiatus, writing courses helped me flesh out my writer’s toolkit.

Okay, perhaps I couldn’t get away from using clever women with quips on their lips, or what I call sassitude. Anyway, my writing was coming together, and my voice and the characters’ voices blended into a varied read. But why not try a new concept, too? At this point, I was merely writing for myself. The thought of publication had never been further from my mind. As a result, straying outside the norm wasn’t much of a risk.

I’ve always been a feminist in the truest sense of the word. I want female characters to be equal to men. Not superior, but not inferior in any arena of human life. None of this romance that requires a hot alpha male to assist our feisty heroine for me, thank you very much. More than that, I wanted to see a true female partnership, à la Melanie Gibson and Daniela Glover in Lethal Weapon.

Then a second idea sparked. What if I included a twist on a common plot device? [I don’t like spoilers, so I won’t go into detail here.]

This is how Divide and Conquer was born. An unconventional plot with two strong females (I call them ‘alpha females’), united by nothing more than a similar sense of humor and a prophecy, would give me back my Me-ness. So I labored for months, adding ever more twists to the plot, making the characters pop to life, turning over the words in my mind to get them just right.

A warrior charged with mentoring a geek. A quirky gargoyle. Enemies who might be friends, and friends who might be enemies.

When I was done, I was proud. I’d told a story that was different from most books out there. The kind of story that would grip me, the writer. I was no longer writing inadvertent ‘fanfiction.’

But would I have the guts to show it to people?

How I got my contract

I started with writing contests, judged by people I’d never meet. I won the first contest I entered, and finaled in many, many more as I continued to tweak. After a while, it became apparent I was using contests and tweaking as an excuse to avoid putting my work before “real” people. So I found a few beta readers willing to tear my manuscript to pieces. While they didn’t offer much in terms of suggestions for improvement, they did stroke my ego. Most importantly, my inner Darynda Jones had been disguised by a unique plot and unique characters, and only one reader even brought up her name.

Still shying away from sending my book to agents and editors, I signed up for a couple of courses and a mentorship, designed to help me write a synopsis, a query letter, loglines, and fifty other torture devices designed by industry professionals to sift out the weak from the ones who are truly hungry for writing success. My mentor was incredibly thoughtful and encouraging, and I was nearly ready to submit to agents. Nearly. Something held me back. My old insecurities reared their ugly heads with those beady eyes that squint at you as if saying, “Go ahead. I dare you. Just be ready for the soul-crushing rejections piling up in your computer’s inbox.”

After a good talking-to from my writing partner, I presented my pitch to a number of acquiring editors. Casual-like. No pressure.

Success.

Excuse me?

Yup, soon I had a contract. I was ecstatic. But confused. What about all the submitting to agents malarkey I was definitely going to do at some non-specific point in the future if the weather conditions were right?

Well, I liked the editor, trusted her, and nothing else mattered. I’d found someone who accepted my work as it was. Who accepted my voice and my slightly unusual plot.

Looking back, Charley Davidson changed my life more than any other series. It was the start of my journey to discover who I was as a writer.

I wish writers used humor more extensively. Some are trickling it in effectively, like Mary Buckham. Many rely on snarky tough talk, which also has its appeal. As a reader, my criteria are different. Snarky, tough, funny, silly – I read them all. But as a writer, my confidence soared the minute I picked up Darynda Jones’s book and understood my voice might, just might, be heard one day.

I hope you too had an inspiration like I had. An author or a book or a family member. Please do share.

WRITING ACTIVE HOOKS REVIEW – DOES EXACTLY WHAT IT SAYS ON THE TIN

Mary, Mary, Writers’ Fairy, Grant Me A Wish

The wish of being a better writer and of hooking my readers’ attention.

*swish*

Writing hooks

“Read this, child, and your wish shall be granted.”

Sadly, outside of Mary’s Invisible Recruits series, magic requires a lot of hard graft. But it just got a little bit easier.

Whether you’re a beginner or a pro, some writing rules you’ve always known. “It was a dark and stormy night” has outlived its usefulness. Nowadays, we want to grab agents, editors and readers by the throat from the start.

So you come up with a clever first sentence that attracts the reader’s interest. Next, you set the scene by describing the swooping of the valleys below. And finally you construct the roads that funnel the reader from one scene to the next. Right?

Writing active Hooks

Well, not according to Mary Buckham. Her book tore up the carefully laid infrastructure of my plot like a jackhammer. Has that woman no shame?

I can’t speak to her shame, but there’s no doubting she knows her stuff. Because she not only helped me fill in the freshly excavated holes with a perfect finish, but gave me the tools to build a better and stronger groundwork in the future. From where to place my hooks for optimum benefit to which types work best for my story, she leaves no stone unturned. Practical examples serve as road signs and guide you reliably to your destination: a true page-turner.

So don your hard hats, roll up your sleeves, and let’s dig deep to make the magic happen.

Writing Active Hooks by Mary Buckham is available now.

WORDS OF FEAR

Vocabulary Builder

In fiction writing, finding the right word is not always simple. I own many word collections I whip out now and again, for reference or for inspiration. Today, I share one of those lists with you. This one including words of fear.

Fluttering hearts and clammy skin aside, plenty of verbs, adjectives, and occasionally nouns help build an atmosphere of forboding or outright terror. Play around with them, add your own, but most of all, use them.

Then build your own. Further lists of words I own are alternatives for the various ways we can move from place to place, i.e. synonyms for walk, plus alternatives for pull, push, words that go great with the heart for kick-in-the-teeth viscerals, and so on. Let me know if you have any preferences. I’m happy to share.

www.carmen-fox.com

BOOK REVIEWS AS LEVERAGE

Book Reviews Influence Authors

Britney Spears

The best books are the ones that grab the reader, and the best readers are the ones that feel engaged.

When something is precious to us, we want to hang on to it, keep it a secret, defend it with life and limb. Not so with books. Great books need to be shared. They drive us to talk about them, analyze them, and perhaps even reference them.

We readers kick back with a neat mojito and wait for the next installment to be released, trusting the author won’t let us down. After all, sequels are expected, but they’d better live up to the promise of our first foray into that new world.

But what if we had a say in how plots develop, what trials our favorite characters must overcome next, and who should date whom?

In genre fiction, we do have a say. Except, we rarely use our power. With millions of books to choose from, we can be fussy. Writers do their best to be visible, but at best they manage to keep up with the crowd, not stand out from it. Only one factor distinguishes a good author from a successful author.

Readers.

Without us, they’d have a snowball’s chance in the Californian sun of getting their work out there. Sure, reviews are meant to help other readers. But the main beneficiary is the author.

Amazon is throwing obstacle after obstacle at new authors, apparently in the name of providing a better and more transparent service to their readers. You need an insanely large number of independent reviews (and only Amazon decides what constitutes independent) to be featured in their “Other readers who bought this also bought this” list. Sometimes they won’t even allow reviews unless the reader bought the book from them. It’s a great marketing model, but hell on an author’s bottom line.

Other companies, like Barnes & Noble, have taken huge losses because Amazon continues to monopolize the book market. Let’s not even mention independent book stores that aren’t so much waving readers into their shops as they’re drowning. Yet book reviews can drive sales, which is what these places need to get out of the water.

Goodreads, which is incidentally owned by Amazon, is a fantastic place for readers to exchange ideas and to talk openly about the books that gripped them. Here, you can find new fodder for your mind through friends and those you trust, simply by checking out their bookshelves and reading their reviews.

Okay. Authors and book sellers need reviews. I have ’em. What do I do next?

As should be apparent by now, an author can only survive in this wilderness if kind readers leave reviews and use word-of-mouth to spread their enthusiasm.

As readers, we should write informative reviews where we can, but even short reviews can help an author get their books to a greater audience. We stuff a lot of work into reviews, consider each phrase. Except, we do not use our words to line our coffers. In turn, let’s demand to be heard.

How?

We can join authors’ Facebook pages, contact them on their websites or email them directly. But messages can get drowned out or might not make it through their websites’ filters. So why not use our reviews to offer ideas or suggestions? Authors, especially debut authors, will read just about every review they can get their hands on.

I’m not implying we tell them how to write their books, but what’s to stop us from adding that we’d love to see more of one character or one plot element in the sequel?

I’m not just a reader, but also a writer, and if my readers have ideas, hell yeah, I wanna hear them. Once I open up my fictional world to someone, we share that world. But to truly share something, you got to be willing to relinquish a measure of control over it.

What’s the harm in giving the readers what they want, so long as it doesn’t compromise my integrity? You want me to explore my characters’ pasts? I can totally do that. You want to see more of Kirk, my chain-smoking gargoyle? It’s a done deal.

What if I have nothing to suggest?

Even without specifically offering advice, reviews influence authors. They encourage them to write more and faster, and tell sellers like Amazon we want these authors to do well.

The number of stars you leave also does a fair bit of communicating. If a book warrants two stars or less, you wouldn’t even finish a book, let alone write a review. Some do, but I’m not sure what they’re hoping to achieve. Are they trying to warn other readers or are they simply trolls, looking to destroy an author? Above that, three, four and five stars leave a lot of scope for impressing on an author and other readers how you felt about the plot and the characters.

So please, please, please. Next time a book pulls you into its world, write a review and post it on Amazon.com, Amazon.co.uk (same login details), Amazon.ca, B&N, Waterstone’s, Goodreads, your blog,… You’ll be helping the author, but also helping yourself.

GENRES, SUBGENRES AND SUBSUBGENRES

Or: Why You Should Embrace Pigeonholes

Book genres

Agents and Publishers are keen to pigeonhole writers into ever more restrictive book genres. What used to be Sci-Fi/Fantasy became Fantasy became Paranormal became Urban Fantasy became Dark Urban Fantasy became Dark Urban Fantasy with Romantic Elements.

Uhm. Seriously?

Authors spend valuable time figuring out the category their work falls in. Most of the time, their books are wedged firmly between two subgenres. Which do they choose? But choose they must, because agents and editors demand ever more specific classifications. Do readers really care? Not so much. Artificial distinctions won’t overtly affect whether or not anyone reads your book. I’m an avid reader, yet I don’t care if you write Dark Urban Fantasy with Romantic Elements or a lighter variety of vampire fiction. If you have an effective blurb, a great cover and a descriptive title, readers will find you. Right?

Well, maybe. There is one very specific way in which authors directly benefit from pigeonholing themselves.

While your specific genre might not mean a lot on the face of it, let’s examine this back-to-front, starting with the reader.

Case study: Ms. Gertrude Sample

A reader, let’s call her Gertrude, likes Kim Harrison and Jaye Wells. Gertrude’s friend Barney might surmise she likes Urban Fantasy with witches. If Barney were to recommend a book to her, he’d pick another series featuring witches. Makes sense, doesn’t it? However, only a limited number of books with this particular element exist, and Gertrude is hungry for more reading material.

If Gertrude likes Kim Harrison, perhaps she also digs Patricia Briggs. It’s then reasonable to assume she likes witches, vampires, werewolves and hopefully shifters generally. Barney’s list of recommendations grows.

Once Gertrude has exhausted this list, what next? Perhaps she also has an interest in other supernatural/preternatural creatures from lore, e.g. succubi, satyrs, fae, and so on. Fantastic. That’s another twenty or thirty titles to add to Barney’s list.

Three months later, Gertrude’s back for more. Instead of rolling his eyes at his demanding reader friend, Barney mines more remote subgenres. How about demons and angels? Or Urban Fantasy with worlds and beings hitherto unheard of? Oh, and how important is the romance angle in Gertrude’s decision-making process anyhow?

Finally, after a lot of reading, Gertrude reaches the huge crop of books generically referred to as Urban Fantasy. But she had to read hundreds and hundreds of books along the way.

At what point might Barney recommend my books to Gertrude? My first book Divide and Conquer features no creatures from lore. Instead, I built a new world with new conflicts and new preternatural elements. It specifically appeals to readers who like fun reads, with major plot twists, a hidden world separate from everyday Seattle, and a healthy but not overwhelming splash of romance. Shoot! There is no category for that. Perhaps I should make up my own. I will promote it as Multiworld Urban Fantasy with Romantic Elements. Catchy, eh? But how is Gertrude going to find me? She will have to work her way through a frak-ing long index before she stumbles on Multiworld Urban Fantasies with Romantic Elements on Barney’s list. So in the year 2026, then?

Okay. Perhaps it doesn’t need to be quite that precise. Let’s just call it Urban Fantasy with Original Worlds. Still, it’ll take a long time before I can count Gertrude as one of my readers.

Case study: Ms. Shaniqua Sample

Now, Gertrude’s estranged sister Shaniqua loves Amanda Bonilla. She loves the love triangle, the idea of hidden worlds and beings that have been around a long time. Since Divide and Conquer has some of these elements (a hidden world, romantic elements, beings with unusual powers), Shaniqua should discover my book pretty quickly. Even without Barney’s help. Because we have both built original worlds.

My second book, Guarded, features werewolves, vampires, demons, and one spunky satyr detective learning about her place in a world she’d rather not live in. Even though it features creatures from lore, the book is not concerned with their agendas. No vampire politics, werewolf hierarchy issues. Yet I would comfortably place it alongside Kim Harrison and Patricia Briggs. No doubt Gertrude will pounce soon. Shaniqua? Nope. Not a chance.

Not unless Shaniqua and Gertrude bury the family hatchet and reconnect over a cup of tea and a good ol’ yap about books, during which Gertrude recommends Guarded to Shaniqua.

Aha!

Categories help you find your ideal audience quickly. Hopefully, your Getrudes will leave positive reviews on Amazon and Goodreads and tell their non-cyber friends and estranged sisters about your book. Before you know it, Shaniqua and her friends will have found you through word-of-mouth, no matter if they normally read your specific genres or not. (Incidentally, if readers who can’t stand your specific genre won’t read your book, they can’t leave negative reviews either.)

What this comes down to

Even though as readers we might casually declare our love for Urban Fantasy, we have preferences. We have books or authors we are drawn to like the lines of a triangle. If new authors provide their readers with a suitable comparison, they might find each other more quickly, and the word-of-mouth campaign can start. But advertise yourself as an “Urban Fantasy” author, and you’ll be at the bottom of a very long list, both for Gertrude and for Shaniqua.

This is why I embrace classifications. In fact, I’d go even further. As a reader, I follow voice more than genre. I love Darynda Jones and Jennifer Rardin, and can comfortably settle down with one of Mary Buckham’s offerings. I very much enjoy the less sassy and more suspenseful offerings of Kim Harrison or Keri Arthur, too. In a book Venn diagram, Divide and Conquer falls between Darynda Jones for voice and Kim Harrison for suspense and Amanda Bonilla for content.

How would you categorize your favorite genres? Are you led more by genre or by word of mouth?

THE STIGMA OF WRITING INTIMACY

Writing sex scenes – Why all the fuss?

Guarded
Collage for Guarded, its raunchy nature obvious

As I embarked on a new project, I’ve had to confront a few demons. Not all of them mine. How far should I go in incorporating sex scenes to be faithful to my vision of where the story needs to go? Will sexing-up my novel turn me into a pariah, destined to be shunned by friends and relatives? I’ve written about sex before, but my next novel is planned to be a step more graphic. Yet even turning up the heat factor by one setting poses problems.

Doing research on erotic romance, and on the authors who write it, I came across an interesting survey.

The Fussy Librarian survey

Demographics

In May 2014, the Fussy Librarian, an ebook recommendation website, asked 103 authors of erotic romance novels a bunch of questions. Some of the results were predictable, notably their gender (94% female, predominant age group: 24-54 years, 89% heterosexual). The husbands/wives/partners of most of the authors questioned here, and in 69% of cases their mothers, are fully aware of what’s going on on their computers. Their fathers? Well, daddys and daughters. Only 53% of authors had shared their chosen genre with their fathers.

I get that. But did their parents actually read any of their erotic novels? A surprising 42% did.

Meet the authors

So, who are these people who write erotica? Turns out, they are people like you and me. The average age they lost their virginity and the number of times they have sex in a month match the average American (as per a survey carried out by the Kinsey Institute). And 45% of our authors had sex on a first date. At this point, it should be noted that in a Singles in America survey, 2012, the average among all singles, male and female is 44%, but an earlier 2004 ABC News survey discovered only 17% of women had sex on a first date. Still, the 44% mentioned in the Singles in America survey presumably had sex with a partner, right?

Secret layers?

Are erotic romance authors kinkier than the average American? It would certainly appear so. According to the Kinsey Institute, less than 20% of Americans had participated in BDSM (bondage, discipline, sadism, masochism), but a whopping 41% of our authors had given it a go. Most of them (84%) had had sex outdoors (average according to an ABC news poll in 2004 was 54%). Sex in the office, anyone? 41% of our authors screamed ‘yes,’ compared to only 7% according to the ABC News poll.

Erotic romance authors also appear to have had more sexual partners than the average American, although the rate of infidelity among those surveyed was notably lower.

What does it all mean?

These are stats. They’re interesting, for sure, but what can we glean from the numbers? Perhaps I’m completely off-base, but we should not forget who we’re talking about. These erotic romance authors write about sex every day. They make money treating intimacy like the natural and desirable thing it is. When they admit to having attempted BDSM or sex in unusual places, I can see no reason they should feel shy about admitting it in a survey (especially not if it’s just a few ticks on a piece of paper). Ask the average person, not everyone is going to be so forthright. Even if they’re promised anonymity.

My guess is the number among erotic romance authors may indeed be slightly higher, although not as high as the figures suggest. Either way, these authors take their writing seriously. They will not giggle at the mention of sex and are bound to be curious about the techniques and locations they write about.

Why did I share these stats with you?

I have the highest respect for authors of erotic novels. My tastes don’t run into the exotic, but I respect authors who push boundaries. My next book, Guarded, is my raunchiest book yet. A mere three sex scenes, but more graphic than anything I’ve attempted before. And already the panic has set in. Should I get a super-secret pen name so none of my friends will know that the intimate details I describe were conjured in my brain? The other day I mentioned the steamier nature of the book to a friend of mine, who assured me that if I went ahead, she would never be able to look at me the same way.

I fear she won’t be alone. Telling my parents? When pigs fly.

Is this the year 2014? I’m tempted to bury my book forever, yet a tiny, rebellious part of me is tired of this hypocrisy. If my characters engage in sex, is this somehow equal to posting a video of me in the act on the Internet? Am I suddenly a bad person? By the same logic, what does it say about me if my character kills one of her enemies? The hang-up is my friend’s, but it’s a hang-up that will affect me all the same.

Does anyone have advice for a writer who wishes to nudge the envelope just a tad? How did you cope with the stigma?

Thank you.

HEROINES KICK UP A FUSS

Heroines in Fiction

Divide and Conquer

And still the debate over whether woman have achieved emancipation in fiction rages on. Well, it kind of depends.

What I love about the Urban Fantasy genre is that it doesn’t matter if the main character is male or female. Jim Butcher’s character Harry Dresden is just as entertaining as Darynda Jones’ Charley Davidson. Most series I read have female leads, but even among those books lies a whole lot of gray, from the tough-on-the outside Damsel to the softly spoken Buttkicker.

In television, the first truly independent woman who could hold her own and accepted-but-didn’t-need help from tall strangers was Buffy Summers. She was kind, insecure, certainly not in love with her own powers, but always ready with the stake when a fanged foe came a-knocking.

Before Buffy, strong women, for example in anime, were stripped of nearly everything that made them female, as if femininity and violence, or even femininity and self-confidence, were mutually exclusive. Even today this sort of thinking finds great favor with certain screen writers and authors.

But heroines can be wonderfully feminine and tough at the same time. I’m not even talking about characters walking around unshaven with a chip on their shoulder, stabbing any man that looks at them funny. No, mental strength is the true key to emancipating a character. Cagney and Lacey, those eighties female cops, had that in spades. While one was married with children, the other was looking for love. Yet both did their jobs with the kind of obsession that had up to that point been considered exclusively a male domain. Sadly they were surrounded by plenty of chauvinists to provide humor for the less enlightened.

In fact, Cagney and Lacey’s partnership inspired my book Divide and Conquer. I wanted to spin a story around two women with fiercely different backgrounds being thrown together by a common fate. Lea and Nieve, my characters, do not become BFFs immediately, but they are connected by a bond that transcends normal friendship. At the same time, I did not want a Buffy/Faith scenario, where they were always at odds with one another.

Sadly, too many agents and readers still prefer a strong male to ably assist their “feisty” heroine (nothing condescending about being called “feisty,” right, ladies?). In fact, I was once asked by a beta reader to give the males of Divide and Conquer a more prominent role. When I enquired what she meant, I was told a romance is only believable if the man proves his worth by playing the central role in the ultimate battle. Otherwise he would not be an alpha male.

Seriously?

Well, I believe in the ‘alpha female.’ Luckily, most authors agree that Urban Fantasy is one genre where women can be strong and competent. Where they choose their friends and their partners according to their own ideas, and not in line with expected stereotypes. Here, women are allowed to cry, throw a hissy, kick ass if ass needs kicking, and generally emote and act like real-life human beings.

Hurrah for Urban Fantasy.

What are your feelings on the subject?

THE WRITE PATH with Haley Whitehall

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The Write Path – Haley Whitehall

In this series, authors discuss their books, from what inspired them to what they hope readers take away from their work. My guest today is Haley Whitehall, author of historical fiction and romance.

Let me hand over my mic. The next voice you’ll hear will be Haley’s.

Haley Whitehall

1. What is Wild and Tender Care about?

Wild and Tender Care is my first historical western romance. It takes place in Colorado Territory in 1870. Dr. William Steere is a half-breed and is finding a hard time starting his own medical practice because of all the racial prejudice against Indians. He meets Ida Page at the Independence Day picnic and immediately has feelings for the fiery redhead. Ida is a former shady lady turned laundress. She reformed but the good Christians won’t let her forget her sordid past. Will the town let the two outcasts have their happy ending?

2. What do you think attracts readers to your main characters?

Both of my main characters have had a rough childhood and have more or less learned to be independent and look out for themselves. Underdogs always appeal to me but may not appeal to everyone.

Dr. Steere is an alpha male who is also charming and caring. Alpha males have always been a favorite with romance readers and I hope they will also like seeing his softer side. Ida is a strong-willed woman. Writers always put themselves into their characters, but she has more of my qualities than most. She has taken her tough lot in life without becoming bitter and just keeps fighting for her respect and place in society. I like a feisty heroine who makes the hero chase her.

3. What message do you hope the reader takes away from your book?

My message developed naturally as I wrote this book. I never really set out to tell a story with a specific theme or message in mind. The characters seem to find those out on their own. My message is do not give up on love. There is someone out there for everyone and the right someone will accept your past, faults and all.

4. What was it about your book that made you so determined it should be published?

I thought the message in Wild and Tender Care is one that many people need to hear. I was also tired of reading about strong alpha males who seem more like jerks than heroes in a romance novel. Dr. Steere is my kind of alpha. He is equally strong and caring. I think more romances need to show the tender side of alpha males.

5. Comparing the ideas you had before writing the book with the finished product, would you change anything if you could travel back in time?

There are a few passages which are still a little awkward. After several rounds of editing all the words seem to blend together and it is only after the book is published when I see the remaining flaws. I would like one more editing pass to clean it up, but really I am very pleased with this story and how it turned out.

Buy Links:
Liquid Silver Books ~ Amazon US ~ Amazon UK ~ Barnes and Noble ~ ARe

 

Haley Whitehall

 

Author Bio:
Haley Whitehall lives in Washington State where she enjoys all four seasons and the surrounding wildlife. She writes historical fiction and historical romance set in the 19th century U.S. When she is not researching or writing, she plays with her cats, watches the Western and History Channels, and goes antiquing. She is hoping to build a time machine so she can go in search of her prince charming. A good book, a cup of coffee, and a view of the mountains make her happy. Visit Haley’s website at haleywhitehall.com.

Other Historical Romance Titles:

Midnight Caller (Moonlight Romance, Book 1)
Midnight Heat (Moonlight Romance, Book 2)
Midnight Kiss (Moonlight Romance, Book 3)
Soldier in Her Lap

Where to find Haley Whitehall:
Twitter: http://twitter.com/HaleyWhitehall
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/LightonHistory
Goodreads: http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/5752677.Haley_Whitehall
Blog: http://haleywhitehall.com/blog/
Amazon Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/Haley-Whitehall/e/B0078EO6CE/
Newsletter: https://tinyletter.com/HaleyWhitehall

THE READ PATH with Olga Godim

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The Read Path – Olga Godim

In this series, guest bloggers spill all about their roles as gatekeepers between authors and readers. They review books on blogs, websites, podcasts or booksellers’ webpages, influence buyers and connect with authors. My guest today is Olga Godim, a reader and author who understands and takes advantage of the vast resources offered by Goodreads.

Let me hand over my mic. The next voice you’ll hear will be Olga’s.

 

1. What type of books first captured your imagination?

This is a more complicated question than you’d think. I always liked reading. Since childhood, I liked to stay home on my sofa with a book much more than play outside with friends. I was a solitary child, a bookworm. There were too many interesting books to name one type.

My family was into modern literary fiction, so I read it too, mostly. After a while I realized that I didn’t like it a great deal. Eventually, I gravitated towards classics and from them towards mythology: ancient Greek myths, King Arthur’s legends, Indian epics Mahabharata and Ramayana, Homer.

When I was a young mother myself, with children of my own, I finally discovered fantasy. My first fantasy writer was Mercedes Lackey. I was smitten from the first moment I opened her book. It felt like coming home, finding my niche in the universe of books. Everything I had unconsciously searched for in myths and legends was there: the imaginary worlds, magic and heroes, dragons and princesses, talking horses and brave adventurers. Through Lackey’s Valdemar novels, I fell in love with the genre.

Of course, I read other genres as well – romance, mystery, mainstream – but since 2012, when I started regularly posting my reviews on GoodReads and later on BookLikes, my statistics show interesting figures. Here are my shelves on GoodReads as they stand today.

• Fantasy ​​– 277
• Mystery ​– 75
• Romance ​– 61
• Mainstream ​– 45

Obviously, fantasy dominates my reading list and it also dominates my writing. I’m a fantasy writer, too.

2. With so much choice, how do you find new reading material?

That’s easy. Once again, I’ll direct you to my current GoodReads statistics. My To-Read shelf contains 171 titles, and it’s not nearly complete. Sometimes, I don’t put books into it, but write them (the authors and the titles) into a special notebook. Most of my To-Read lists (both digital and paper) come from my online friends’ reviews and recommendations. Some come from book blurbs. I read them. I also love spoilers. They let me decide if I want to read the book.

Several of my favorite authors automatically go into my lists, whenever their new books come out. Those include in fantasy and sci-fi: Sharon Shinn, Patricia Briggs, Wen Spencer, Frank Tuttle, Sarah Wynde, Cassandra Rose Clarke (my latest love affair in fantasy), and Lois McMaster Bujold. I love Terry Pratchett, too, but I’m selective about his books. I prefer his City Watch sub-series to the others. In romance, Jennifer Crusie is my absolute favorite. Georgette Heyer is a wonderful romance writer, the founder of Regency romance, but unfortunately I already read everything she’s written, and she’s been dead for decades. Sometimes I re-read her just to re-live the pleasure. In cozy mystery, Carola Dunn holds my heart.

Before I joined GR, I was often stumped: what to read next? I couldn’t imagine myself without a book waiting, but it was hard to choose. Now, my list is getting unwieldy. I don’t know when I’ll be able to finish it. Probably never, which is encouraging.

And I still read classics, although not nearly as often as I did in my youth. My latest classical discovery was Christopher Morley’s Parnassus on Wheels – a delightful little book published in 1917.

3. How do you go about writing your reviews?

It depends on a book. In most cases, I start with a short blurb and then segue into what touched me most. I often disclose my take on the characters, the plot, the pacing, the dialogue. Sometimes, I include quotes in my reviews. Some books have deeper ideas, and I mention my thoughts on the subject, whether I agree or disagree. Some books are funny, and I point that out. If I’m irritated by a certain aspect, I write about that too. Not necessarily everything goes into every review. There are no rules.

I rarely write bad reviews, generally because I almost never finish books I dislike. Writing reviews for such books seems dishonest. And I really don’t want the writers, especially the new writers, to feel bad. I may not like their books, but someone else might. I don’t wish to spoil their chances. On the other hand, I’m not as reticent about classics or famous writers. If I dislike their books, I say so. They can’t be harmed by my negative reviews, so I don’t have to guard my tongue.

I want to stress one important point about my reviews: I never write them on demand, never accept books for reviews from anyone. I either buy my books or get them from the library. The only exception is NetGalley. Sometimes, when I want to read a new novel by a certain author, and it’s not yet available at the library, I look through NetGalley.

4. The publishing world is undergoing a radical change brought about, in no small measure, through readers. How has the new landscape affected you?

As a reader, it didn’t affect me at all, except I had to buy a Kindle to read books that are only available in electronic formats. As a writer though, the effects are still rippling. For one thing, there are so many books being published daily it’s hard to get my books noticed by readers. Hard to get reviews. Hard to sell books.

One fact is glaring though. With the ease of self-publishing, many authors opt to go that road, and the results aren’t always or even often good. In fact, most self-published books I read are bad. They’re raw, need serious revisions and deep editing. A few exceptions only emphasize that rule, but I’m glad those exceptions exist. One of them is Sarah Wynde. She is a great fantasy writer and she is self-published. Another is Frank Tuttle. I love his fantasy. There are a few more like them, and I mightn’t have discovered these terrific writers without the self-publishing option.

5. Out of the many books you’ve read, which two had the greatest impact on you?

It’s easier to name writers than books. The first one was Mercedes Lackey. I told you about her in the question #1. She started me on my current road of reading fantasy and writing fantasy. She opened the genre for me. I don’t read her much anymore, I found a better fit for my penchant for fantasy, but Lackey would always have a special place in my heart.

The other one is Sharon Shinn – my favorite fantasy writer. I enjoy her lyrical and magical tales, a blend of fantasy and romance. Her stories are full of light, without the darkness that’s dominated fantasy novels in the past decade. I especially like her older Samaria series. In it, she writes about angels, and her concept of angels is unique. It has nothing to do with biblical angels and everything to do with the writer’s imagination. She created a charming race of angels in her stories, angels I believe in, despite my atheism. When I read Shinn’s books, my spirit soars. I want to write like she does. This is my aspiration.

She is one of very few writers I use as a self-teaching aid. Whenever I’m blocked in my own writing, I ask myself: how would Shinn handle such a conundrum? I open one of her books at random and page through a dialog or a narrative to see what she does. It often helps.

In general, my reviews are helping me to become a better writer. When I analyze a book, I see mistakes the author made, see what is working and what isn’t, and apply what I’m learning to my own writing. But there is a side effect to this postulate. Because I see mistakes, I stopped enjoying books that are not written perfectly. I’ve become too picky in my reading, much more so than before I started writing reviews two years ago. It might be a good thing though.

Media links:

Website: ​http://olgagodim.wordpress.com
GoodReads: ​https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/6471587.Olga_Godim
BookLikes: ​http://olgagodim.booklikes.com/
Wattpad: ​http://www.wattpad.com/user/olga_godim

THE WRITE PATH with Mary Buckham

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Mary Buckham

In this series, guest bloggers talk to us about their books. My guest today is author, teacher, head ninja and sometimes personal life coach Mary Buckham, who will be discussing Invisible Fears, part one of her Invisible Recruit series. You can find my review on her book here: Invisible Fears – Review

So let me hand over my mic. The next voice you’ll hear will be Mary’s.

1. What is your book about?

Maru BuckhamINVISIBLE FEARS is the fourth full-length novel in the Invisible Recruits Urban Fantasy series and the first in that series focusing on Kelly McAllister, a former kindergarten teacher turned covert agent to fight preternaturals. She also has an ability that has always set her apart—she can turn invisible. Which sounds fun, but is everything but, especially in this story.

Kelly’s the nice girl-next-door who always sees the glass half-full and she’s leading her first mission deep into the heart of equatorial Africa. She’s to find a rare item that is the key to understanding and stopping a dangerous threat to humans and preternaturals alike. She’s also looking for answers to how her beloved older sister died in this part of the world while doing relief work, a quest that opens up more questions than answers and puts her official mission at risk almost immediately. Danger is around every corner as Kelly struggles to complete her mission, protect innocent children under her care, and stay alive. Then there’s a hunky wolf Shifter who’s causing her all sorts of other complications.

2. What do you think attracts readers to your main characters?

Kelly is that kind, compassionate, genuinely good person we’d all like to be, or think of ourselves as being, pushed to the brink physically, mentally and emotionally. Some see her optimism as naïve and dangerous, especially in her role as a fighter against preternatural threats. Others see her in ways she’d never see herself. I think what attracts readers to her is her journey of self-discovery that’s as much a part of the story as surviving the external threats she faces.

3. What message do you hope the reader takes away from your book?

My book titles tend to reflect the themes of my stories. So in INVISIBLE FEARS Kelly must face a whole gamut of fears—external and internal. Attacks by a Smere goblin, a kidnapping by a sinister preternatural mercenary leader, slogging through the jungle, as well as learning the truth behind her sister’s death and her own hidden background. Facing the type of hurdles she has to face is not easy and doing so while struggling to remain true to who Kelly thinks she is, adds a whole other layer of complications for her.

4. What is it about your book that made you so determined it should be published?

Writing the first 3 novels and 2 novellas in the series focused on Alex Noziak, a witch/shaman with a wicked attitude and hell-for-leather approach to life. Writing about nice-girl Kelly was a 180% turn around to really get into her skin while seeing her through her fellow IR (Invisible Recruit) teammates and through her own world view. Just because she was a good girl did not mean she didn’t have issues and challenges, and it certainly made it interesting to put her into situations that would have stopped battle-hardened warriors, and see how she approached them. Because so many of my readers enjoyed Alex, switching to a new character, even one they recognized, was a huge risk for me as a writer and for the sake of the series. So far though the feedback has been very positive. Proving good girls don’t finish last!

5. Comparing the ideas you had before writing the book with the finished product, would you change anything if you could travel back in time?

This book was originally written for a major publisher as the 3rd book in a 5 book series they’d contracted with me for a few years back. But the month before it was due for release the publisher stopped publishing these kinds of stories so Kelly’s story was set aside. When I revitalized the series with a preternatural/paranormal element last year I took book 2 in the series and revealed elements of that character and her own challenges in 3 novels and 2 novellas. I’ll be doing the same with Kelly and each of the remaining primary Invisible Recruit characters. So 5 Invisible Recruit operatives, three novels each and as many novellas as I have time to write creates a huge story world and story arc to juggle.

In INVISIBLE FEARS, even though the core story concepts – Kelly, former kindergarten teacher turned operative and set in Africa – remained from the original finished draft, so much of the story was rewritten that it’d be hard to see what remains of that original story. As for traveling back in time I’m very, very glad now that these books were not published by the big NY publishing House because I’m having way too much fun writing and releasing them in a manner that allows readers to get them in their hands sooner rather than later. Which means the next novella about Kelly was released in July and the next novel—INVISIBLE SECRETS—will be in September.

 About Mary

Mary Buckham USA Today bestselling author Mary Buckham writes non-fiction; the Amazon best selling WRITING ACTIVE SETTING series (in e-format and now in book form); as well as fiction – Urban Fantasy w/attitude. Love romance, danger & kick-ass heroines? Find it in her Invisible Recruits series: www.MaryBuckham.com or www.InvisibleRecruits.com.

Intrigued? Grab your copy of INVISIBLE FEARS here:

Amazon: http://amzn.to/1l9LcHe
B&N: http://bit.ly/1lDNIbX
Kobo: http://bit.ly/SV8kkK