Showing posts with label Soul Mate Publishing. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soul Mate Publishing. Show all posts

Monday, March 24, 2014

INTERVIEW WITH EMELLE GAMBLE, AUTHOR OF MOLLY HARPER


Readers, please welcome Emelle Gamble to the blog for an interview. Don't miss her giveaways nearer the bottom! She’s been writing fiction her whole life—her first story when she was only five. Heavens, I was reading comic books and only imagining stories when I was five, not writing them down. 

Here’s the interview.

Caroline: Emelle, tell us something about growing up.

Emelle: I’m a Southern California girl, the oldest of three, a slightly nerdy kind of girl who always had her nose in a book and her head in the clouds. I wanted to be an actress until I was twenty (who didn’t, it was LA!) but then accepted reality and decided to find a full-time job that didn’t involve my looks or luck and that very hard on your ego work it took to be a working actor. So I finished college and took a full time job with ‘the phone company’ and was blessed to become a wife and mother. 

Caroline: The phone company is a great job, especially in past decades. Who are your favorite authors and favorite genres?

Emelle: I love mystery and books about love and families. I love books that mix all three. I love the authors I’ve loved my whole life, Mary Stewart and Victoria Holt, Rosamunde Pilcher and PD James, Sue Grafton and Walter Mosley, along with a slew of romance writers, among them my critique partners Mary Blayney, Elaine Fox, Lavinia Kent, and newcomer Evie Owens, whose first novella, The Psychic Detective, combines all three of my favorite elements in a magical way that will make you yearn for the next installment the way I yearn for the next installment of Downtown Abbey.

Caroline: I’ll check out Evie Owens. What’s your favorite way to relax and recharge?

Emelle: I need to get out of my house (where my writing office is) to relax or I feel a pull like a giant, scary magnet to come back and stare at my computer screen. So a weekend away, a beach, time with hubby where part of my brain isn’t actively plotting and or planning dinner, is my favorite. And my only real hobby is reading, and watching HGTV. Love those Property Brothers!

Caroline: Now you’ve mentioned two of my favorite TV shows: "Downton Abbey" and "Property Brothers." Do you have a favorite quote that sums up how you feel about life?

Emelle: "A goal without a plan is just a wish." Antoine de Saint-Exupery
  
It says it all…one step at a time will get you anywhere.

Caroline: How long have you been writing?

Emelle: Forever. Not kidding. I’ve been published since 1990, took off 10 years and got back into print in 2012.

Caroline: Congratulations and welcome back. Where do you prefer to write? Do you need quiet, music, solitude?
Emelle: Dead quite, no one in the house, is the best. I am then allowed to walk around muttering dialogue, doing chores, sit at the computer on an off for hours. Always a desktop. I’m really old school!

Caroline: I also prefer my desktop, but use a laptop on rare occasions. Are you a plotter or a panzer?

Emelle: Can’t imagine just sitting and writing without a roadmap. I always start with a title, a character and the end of the story. I try and follow Michael Hague’s wonderful ‘Hero’s Journey’ outline, and I use note cards.

Caroline: I’m also a plotter. Do you use real events or persons in your stories or as an inspiration for stories?

Emelle: HA! Who doesn’t? We write and give readers our view of everything around us. While imagination is of course the key ingredient, I don’t know any authors who don’t base even imagined werewolves and vampires on real people, either in their life or the news.

Caroline: Do you set daily writing goals? Do you get a chance to write every day?

Emelle: I don’t ‘get a chance’ to write every day. I write every day. It is my job. I set no other goals than that…as a small press and indie author now, I also have to contend with running the small business that author’s must run now to provide marketing for their books. It’s a 7 day a week commitment.

Caroline: It is a heavy commitment, but I love my job. What do you hope your writing brings to readers?

Emelle: Stories and ideas and people that make you think about yourself and entertain you. Novels that ring true, that a reader reaches the end of and says, “Yes, I believe this!”.  Even if the story includes a touch of the paranormal or a ghost, the characters must be believably motivated to act as they do. I work hardest of all on this.

Caroline: What long-term plans do you have for your career?

Emelle: To not give-up in this insane time.

Caroline: Would you like to tell us what you’re working on now?

Emelle: I am writing a book with the working title of KISS ME TWICE. It’s a story of a woman resisting going to her 15 year college reunion, and coping with her mother’s ascent into Alzheimers. HA! I just reread that and thought, boy, what a downer! So let me add there is a robust plot full of quirky ex-classmates and a certain gorgeous old boyfriend named Max Bergman. It’s all about memory and love.

Caroline: We cloak our downer stories with humor. What advice would you give to unpublished authors?

Emelle: All the clichés are true. Write every day. Make it a habit. It is your job. Rewrite, read aloud, join a critique group with people you trust to tell you the truth without any malice. And be prepared to get rejected. And remember what my darling husband, Phil-the-fist, told me years ago, “You don’t fail unless you quit.”

Caroline: What’s a fun fact readers wouldn’t know about you?

Emelle: When I worked for Pacific Telephone, Clint Eastwood sent me flowers for moving a telephone booth so his stunt motorcycle driver wouldn’t kill himself. I’ve still got the enclosed florist card.

Caroline: I am impressed. Share something about you that would surprise or shock readers.

Emelle: I was married to George Clooney. (You didn’t say it had to be true, did you?)

Caroline: You have me there. Is your book a series?

Emelle: No, but I’ve written a prequel to MOLLY HARPER, called DUETS. It was first released in the anthology ONCE AND FOREVER with four other novellas by my wonderful critique partners. DUETS is now available in a separate edition, and is included in the paperback edition of MOLLY HARPER as a bonus to my readers.

Caroline: Can you give readers a blurb about your book?

Here’s a recent Amazon review from a reader that I think gets it right…

Molly Harper was an exceptionally good story. Right away I was drawn into the lives of the characters. On the first page we meet Anne Sullivan, who nervously is awaiting Norma Wintz. Norma and Anne have a connection that will be one of the catalysts for this fast moving, easy to read, engrossing book that affects the lives of Molly Harper, Norma and Anne.

Molly is a modern 'Movie Star', married to another popular movie star and the world believes that her life is a fairy tale. Molly's life is in turmoil, her Mother is ill, her husband is cheating on her and tells her over the phone that their marriage is over. That's just the beginning of this powerful story that centralizes around Molly but all the characters involved have their own stories and feelings. Life is not always as it seems. Hidden truths and secrets are the vehicle that drives this story. This book has all the elements that make a great story, love between parents and child, siblings , old friends and lovers. Hats off to Ms Gamble for a enjoyable, sometimes tearful, but hopeful story that I truly enjoyed reading.

Caroline: How about an excerpt?

Emelle: Here it is.

Anne Sullivan looked down at her watch.
One twenty-one p.m. Norma Wintz was twenty minutes late.
Anne leaned back against the banquette and avoided making eye contact with the waitress hovering at the periphery of her vision. She folded her hands together and imagined her face looked tight as cellophane stretched over a bowl of tuna salad.
She shouldn’t have come, she thought as she glanced around the unfamiliar restaurant. It was all glass and mirrors; chock full of shockingly beautiful Californians surely leading shockingly exciting lives. People who wouldn’t understand a widowed middle-aged woman from Potomac, Maryland breaking into sobs and intruding on their lunch experience.
Which was probably what she was going to do once Norma arrived, Anne thought.
After all, it was the first time Anne would lay eyes on the woman who adopted her baby thirty-five years ago.

Caroline: That excerpt is gripping and should sell a lot of books. Where can readers find your books?

Emelle:



Paperback of both stories: http://www.amazon.com/Molly-Harper-Emelle-
Gamble/dp/1495437701/ref=la_B00DXZ2SJA

Caroline: How can readers learn more about you?

Emelle: Check my links at the end of the post.

Caroline: Is there anything else you’d like readers to know about you?


Emelle: Come like my Facebook Author Page and sign-up for my newsletter before March 31, 2014 and you could win an Amazon Kindle Paperwhite!

Emelle will be awarding a $50 Amazon GC to a randomly drawn commenter during this tour. A digital copy of Molly Harper will be awarded to 3 randomly drawn commenters also during this tour.





Molly Harper
by Emelle Gamble


MOLLY HARPER Blurb:

Movie star Molly Harper has it all, beauty, success in her field, and a loving family and marriage to actor Ben Delmonico. Norma Wintz, Molly’s mother, has it all, a lovely life style and two children who adore her, and a respite from the battle against cancer she’s been fighting. Anne Sullivan, at age fifty, is optimistic that her move to sunny Santa Barbara, California, will allow her to be closer to her youngest son and his family, and help her start her life anew after the death of her beloved husband.

But all three of these women, despite their considerable blessings, are plunged into turmoil when the most intimate of secrets that ties their lives together is revealed. At this same time, Molly Harper is confronted with the news that her marriage to actor Ben Delmonico is over. As she navigates this heartbreak and tries to keep the personal details of the drama off the front pages of the newspapers, Molly must also find a way to once and forever negotiate a way forward with her ex- lover and best friend, the volatile and compelling Cruz Morales.

How each of these characters handles the resulting upheaval in their own life, and in their relationships with one another, forms the compelling story of family, secrets and trust in the romantic women’s fiction novel, MOLLY HARPER.


Excerpt from MOLLY HARPER:
  
When the doorbell rang, Cruz Morales froze. Carefully he set his beer down and glanced out the kitchen window.

He didn’t like what he saw.

He walked to the front entrance of Norma’s house, leaving the pan of chicken and tarragon burbling on a low burner. The soft sounds of Santana playing on the stereo in Molly’s room floated toward him on the evening breeze.

Cruz opened the front door to two uniformed Santa Barbara policeman.

“Officers.” Cruz wiped his hands on the dishtowel he’d stuck in the waistband of his jeans.

The policemen’s faces changed from officious to wary at being confronted by a six-foot-three Hispanic male with a ponytail, tattoos and two gold rings hanging from his right ear.

His bulging biceps beneath the soft old t-shirt didn’t help their comfort level.

Cruz put his hands on his hips and waited. He knew he looked threatening, ugly even, with the scars and disfigurement to the left side of his face.

But he didn’t mind how he looked. Ugly scared people, and kept them away.

Even police.

“Can I help you?” He reminded himself not to move quickly. He’d ended up spread-eagled on the ground more than once in his life for spooking a rookie gringo.

“Is this the Wintz home?” The older of the two men spoke, his right hand on his nightstick.

“Yes. It is.” Cruz offered nothing more. He learned over the years that the best way to protect Molly’s privacy was not to give out gratuitous information.

The cop cleared his throat. “May I ask your name?”

“Cruz Morales.”

“And you are…?”

“I’m a friend of the family.”

“Is that your vehicle out there?” The younger police waved toward the truck in the driveway.

Cruz nodded.

The police looked at each other. “We’ve been trying to contact Miss Molly Harper by phone, but she didn’t answer her cell,” the first cop said. “Is she here?”

“What’s the problem?” Cruz asked.

“I’m afraid I need to save my information for Miss Harper.” 

“Cruz, who is it? Is it Mr. Garcia?” Molly hollered from her bedroom.

“Come in.” Cruz stepped back. He turned and called out, “Molly, there are two policemen here who want to see you. Get dressed and come out here.”

The young cop smirked as he walked by Cruz. He had red hair and freckles, and his shirt was about an inch too big around his skinny neck.

Cruz lifted his chin. It was obvious the rookie knew who Molly was, and was busy imagining her getting dressed.

“Take a seat in the library.” Cruz pointed. “It’s right through the archway there.”

The older man, who wore a name-tag reading ‘Sgt Purcell’ nodded. “Okay. Thanks, Mr. Cruz. Please bring Miss Harper to us, whenever she’s ready.”

Cruz watched them walk across the foyer, their black boots squeaking on the tile.

He didn’t mind that the cop got his name wrong. It was typical arrogance. But Cruz began to feel dread build inside. It always happened when he wasn’t sure what would happen next.

He opened the front door and checked the driveway and yard. There was nothing outside that indicated any of the media assholes were sniffing around yet. His truck was blocked in by the patrol car, but no other vehicles were in sight.

Molly hurried down the hallway. “What’s wrong? Why are the police here? Did Mother call?”

Her face was shiny and red from crying. She looked like she was seventeen, he thought. The age she was when he first fell in love with her. He didn’t remember a lot of things from his past, but he always remembered that.

Cruz closed the door. “No one called the house. But the police said they tried your cell.” He took her left arm gently. “Let’s go see what they want.”

“God, do you think something’s happened to Mother?” Her eyes were wide with panic.

“Don’t borrow trouble. They didn’t say that.”

She didn’t move for a moment, and then she put her arm around his back and leaned against him.

Molly was trembling. Cruz knew there was no way to protect her from whatever was coming. But at least he was here.

Because she called me.

Because she needs help.

She needs me.

Everything in his life had changed over the last three years. Everything except that. Cruz squeezed Molly closer and guided her into the library.

“This is Molly Harper,” Cruz announced. “What’s going on?”


Emelle Gamble, Author

Emelle Gamble was a writer at an early age, bursting with the requisite childhood stories of introspection. These evolved into bad teen poetry and worse short stories. She took her first stab at full length fiction in an adult education writing class when her kids were in bed.  As M.L. Gamble, she published several romantic suspense novels with Harlequin. She has contracted with Soul Mate Publishing for SECRET SISTER, published in the summer of 2013, and DATING CARY GRANT, a March 2014 release.

ONCE AND FOREVER, an anthology which includes the novella Duets, came out on November 1st. MOLLY HARPER, a full length novel starring the characters from DUETS 3 years later was released by Posh Publishing in January.

Emelle lives in suburban Washington D.C. with her husband, ‘Phil-the-fist’, her hero of thirty years, and two orange cats, Lucy and Bella. These girls, like all good villains, have their reasons for misbehaving. Her daughter, Olivia, and son, Allen, are happily launched on their own and contributing great things to society, their mother’s fondest wish.

Review Quotes:

Praise for SECRET SISTER

Along with being a very unique and captivating plot, SECRET SISTER offers a shocking turn of the paranormal kind. So if you are the type of person that wants ordinary romance in a book, you won't find that here. This is a story of friendship, family, and most of all, true love and what those things can mean. I cannot recommend SECRET SISTER strongly enough… “ Fresh Fiction, Fresh Reviews

"If you're looking for a typical women's fiction/romance, don't look here... this story has a twist of the paranormal that will have you willingly stretching your belief in order to enjoy the plot. Emelle Gamble has created a story that will tear your heart out."  Long and Short Reviews

Links:




Twitter: @emellegamble 


SECRET SISTER by Emelle Gamble is now available on Amazon!  http://amzn.to/17J2Bn6

ONCE AND FOREVER  an anthology with Emelle Gamble’s novella, DUETS, is now available on Amazon!    http://amzn.to/1h9fZWv

***Remember to leave a comment to enter Emelle's drawing for a $50 gift card or a copy of MOLLY HARPER.

Thanks for stopping by!

Monday, June 25, 2012

INTERVIEW WITH KATHY L. WHEELER


Readers, please welcome Kathy L. Wheeler today. Kathy and I met through Dallas Area Romance Authors (DARA). We also have written for the same publisher, The Wild Rose Press (TWRP). Kathy lives in Edmond, Oklahoma, where she is active (past president) in Oklahoma Romance Writers of America.

Kathy L. Wheeler, Author



Caroline: Please tell readers about growing up.

Kathy: My childhood was somewhat interesting, as I imagine most are. However, my parents have each been married six times. Yes, I said six (6). I think that made me most adaptable. I grew up in the Dallas/Ft. Worth area, then in high school moved to Boulder, Colorado. Talk about culture shock! I have two sisters and three brothers, though the brothers are all step, you wouldn’t know it. We have a family reunion every three years just to make sure everyone stays together.

Caroline: Who are your favorite authors and favorite genres?

 Kathy: Jayne Ann Krentz is by far my favorite author. I love all of her single titles, whether it’s contemporary, historical or futuristic. Susan Elizabeth Phillips too. My favorite sub-genre to read is Regency Historical. Teresa Medeiros, Elizabeth Boyle, Suzanne Enoch…I could certainly go on and on…

Caroline: Love each of those authors. What’s your favorite way to relax and recharge? Hobbies?

Kathy: What an interesting question. I have several hobbies. I jazzercise, karaoke, musical theater. I love the NFL and the NBA—but relax? Anyone watching Oklahoma City Thunder in the NBA Finals will tell you, that is not relaxing. Hmm, more like an addiction. I keep wondering what I’m going to do when the series ends. And, there is soooo much to do. Ah, but NFL will kick off two months later. So I’ll be good to go!

Caroline: Do you have a favorite quote that sums up how you feel about life?

Kathy: My book QUOTABLE is about a young woman, Genna, who uses obscure quotes to keep people from getting too close. But in one particular scene, she and her friend, Lorianne are having lunch and Lorianne accuses Genna of not dating since the joker from college. Genna answers with something like “The more I get to know men, the more I love my dog.” Lorianne responds with, “You don’t even have a dog.” And, I think that’s funny.

Caroline: I look forward to reading QUOTABLE. Have to confess I collect obscure quotes. How long have you been writing?

Kathy: I’ve been writing since 2006. I saw a Google prompt that said “write a story where Cinderella’s shoe fits one of her evil stepsisters.” So I did. Then I wrote the sister’s stories (they are available on Amazon).

Caroline: Where do you prefer to write? Do you need quiet, music, solitude? PC or laptop?

Kathy: I can write almost anywhere (except when watching an NBA Thunder game, or Dallas Cowboys NFL). Then I just have to set the computer aside and give them my complete attention. Otherwise, they do something stupid, like … lose. I type really fast, so I prefer a laptop, I can take anywhere. I can’t watch a movie when I’m working, but I do like white noise in the form of sports or The History Channel.

Caroline: Are you a plotter or a panzer?

Kathy: Mostly a panzer. But one of my critique partners is a big time plotter so at least there is some kind of balance. And, everyone knows, balance is the key!!!

Caroline: Yes, we all strive for balance, don’t we? Do you use real events or persons in your stories or as an inspiration for stories?

Kathy: I would say not. I think the characters just start talking in my head.

Caroline: Me, too. I hope they never shut up! Do you set daily writing goals? Word count? Number of chapters? Do you get a chance to write every day?

Kathy: Right now, I am inundated with editing. Last summer I had two articles published in a local paper (July and August). Then I signed my first contract (TWRP) in September, a second one (SMP) in October, and a third in December. Just yesterday, I signed my fourth (TWRP) and mailed it off. Edits, edits, edits. I have two more stories in the works. But another one that needs tweaking and submitting. EEEEkkkk!

Caroline: But a selling writer is a happy writer. What do you hope your writing brings to readers?

Kathy: I hope a reader feels what my character feels. Through their eyes. I don’t like being spoon-fed information. I re-read a lot of my favorite books. And every time I go back, I learn something new. I don’t have to be told every single little thing.

Caroline: What long-term plans do you have for your career?

Kathy: I really, really need to learn how to answer this question. I would love to be able to make my living by writing.

Caroline: Wouldn’t we all? Well, some people we know do, but most of us struggle. Would you like to tell us what you’re working on now?

Kathy: Edits, edits, edits.

Caroline: While edits aren’t exactly fun, at least they mean you have not only completed a project, but that it will soon be published. What advice would you give to unpublished authors?

Kathy: Keep writing. Always have something in the works. I had eight completed manuscripts when I signed that first contract. Lucky for me, I had other stuff ready to send off.

Caroline: And that’s good for prospective writers to know. While you’re submitting, keep writing so that when you do sell, you have multiple manuscripts available. Tell us something about you that would surprise or shock readers. A fun fact readers wouldn’t know about you.

Kathy: Most of me is just out there. What-you-see-is-what-you-get. But I do have a minor degree in vocal music. But I don’t think that would surprise many people. Although, singing is very close to my heart, and I can be extremely sensitive about it. I’m as good as some, not as good as others, though in a karaoke environment where there is a lot of alcohol? I’m totally awesome.

Caroline: Is your book a series? If so, how long? Family saga, other?

Kathy: Well, it seems I write mostly series, or rather, books that include characters from previous books. QUOTABLE is the first of four. The second one, Lorianne’s story, MAYBE IT’ YOU is due out in the Fall through Soul Mate Publishing.

Caroline: Tell us something you learned researching your book that surprised/interested you.

Kathy: The book I just signed a contract on, THE ENGLISH LILY follows my Cinderella Series. Lady Kendra Frazier is a character in the Esmeralda story. She is dyslexic. It was interesting to write. The editor who signed the book sent me a note and told me a story regarding her sister who is also dyslexic. The feeling that the character resonated with the editor was intoxicating.

Caroline: We have numerous dyslexic people in my family. Can you give readers a blurb about your book? I am lucky enough to have had two books released in the last couple of weeks. Neither of which are related to one another.





The blurb for: QUOTABLE
GENNA LYNDSEY is not a people person.  A short, too-skinny, wild haired waif, with crazy hair and sturdy nerdy glasses lives through books.  So it’s lucky she and her best friend own their own bookstore.  Her college days taught her that dating was too unreliable to depend on others.  It was then that she started resorting to obscure quotes to shield herself from others who ventured too close.
RICK JOHNSON, Fraud Insurance Claims Investigator, is assigned to look into an unusual number of claims filed by Genna Lyndsey.  He suspects Genna of sabotaging her own property for insurance money.  His investigation uncovers an adorable introvert determined to keep everyone at bay, while someone else resolves to put her out of business—no matter how great the risk.


How about an excerpt of QUOTABLE::

Without so much as a second thought, he moved his mouth over hers in slow deliberation allowing her almost ample time to step back should she have wished. It didn’t matter that the door was to her back and she had nowhere to step back to.
Definitely, the wild honeysuckle drove him wild with desire. Just the feeling of her timorous nature kept him from devouring her outright, tempting as it was. His tongue touched her lips in a feathery motion drinking in her sweetness. He pulled her to him, her slight body leaning into his.
A sharp pain hit his leg. He grunted and broke the kiss, making the break as painful as the pain in his leg. He glanced down. She’d dropped everything she’d been holding, her hands clutching the front of his shirt. Her cheeks were flushed. With hunger? Need?
She seemed at a loss as to what to do next. He stifled an urge to smile, irritation dissolving for the moment.
He grasped her hands gently, surprised by the rising desire to safeguard her. Resisting the appeal to reclaim her mouth, he tugged them from his shirt. Kneeling down, he gathered the spilled belongings. Just as he suspected, he’d been besieged with books.





The blurb for: THE COLOR OF BETRAYAL [Part of the Tales of the Scrimshaw Doll Series through TWRP]
Luke Reiser has every intention of marrying Malia Kane, a difficult feat when she refuses to acknowledge his interest. When Malia’s grandmother asks for a doll left in his attic, Luke believes his luck has changed. He summons Malia to his office, but he doesn’t expect her reaction.
Malia doesn’t have time to do artwork for Luke’s company. She’s preparing for an art show to ease financial difficulties looming like a snuffer ready to extinguish a candle flame. But what she finds at Luke’s office is worse than bankruptcy—it’s that horrid doll bequeathed to her at her mother’s death. Malia has found out the hard way the curse breaks any would-be lover’s nose, and worse. Not wanting to risk injury to Luke, she takes the doll and runs.
Can an ancient doll bring the two together…or will Luke end up next in a long line of victims…with a broken nose as well as a broken heart?

An excerpt of THE COLOR OF BETRAYAL: 
Seeming oblivious to his presence, her gaze spanned the room before dropping her face into open palms. “It’s old. It’s ugly. Why? Why would anyone want the blasted thing?” She had obviously forgotten his presence as the conversation she carried was strictly her own. “It’s that damned curse. It has to be.” She raised her head, staring out a window, its sill covered in dust. Her eyes squinted in the sunlight. “Oooh, it would serve him right if he did snatch the stupid thing.” Full lips pressed in a stubborn line had him lusting to trace them with a fingertip. Coax them into a curve.
“Who?” he demanded, but she didn’t answer. Luke decided to take charge of the situation before she completely lost all contact with reality. “What makes you think the doll is cursed? Not that I believe it for a moment.” It felt odd saying the words aloud, though the words from the note were carved in his memory.
She shot him a startled glance. Yes, that was surprise covering her features. Annoyed, he
promised himself he’d work on forging a less forgettable image later. Right now, however, she
seemed to be debating how much to tell him.
Malia opened her mouth to speak, and suddenly Luke’s brain ceased any rational functioning. A pressing need to kiss those parted lips overtook common sense, and he covered her mouth with his. How much more blatant a signal would he have to send for her to realize his attraction?

Caroline: Where can readers find your books?

Kathy:

QUOTABLE: http://www.soulmatepublishing.com/quotable/

THE COLOR OF BETRAYAL:
http://www.thewildrosepress.com/index.php?main_page=product_info&cPath=175_133&products_id=4880

How can readers learn more about you? http://klwheeler.com
http://kathylwheeler.wordpress.com
Twitter @kathylwheeler
www.Facebook.com/kathylwheeler


Caroline: Is there anything else you’d like readers to know about you?

Kathy: Thank you so much for letting me ramble on. I think I’ve always been a bit of an artsy person. I could draw decent pictures when I was younger (forget painting!), I love to sing. I did some local theater. I was okay, just not great! But writing…writing seems to flow through my blood. And I hope that you enjoy the characters that live in my head.

Thanks for sharing with us today, Kathy.

Readers, thanks for stopping by!


Friday, March 02, 2012

ANN MONTCLAIR SHARES WRITING STEPS

Welcome Ann Montclair today. Born in Los Angeles, California, Ann now lives in the Finger Lakes Region of Western New York with her husband, almost teenage son, and lots of dogs and cats. A grown daughter lives in Los Angeles where she has moved to be near Ann’s parents and grandmother.



Ann’s family enjoys many outdoor activities: hiking, cycling, gardening, birdwatching, snow-shoeing and snowboarding as well as the many cultural activities WNY provides, attending theatre and concerts and visiting museums as often as possible. Inside their little cabin in the woods, it is all about cooking, music, and, of course, reading and writing. When Ann’s son was diagnosed with Type 1 diabetes, the family embraced a healthier lifestyle, and that's also when she decided her dream of becoming a romance writer couldn't wait. Life's just too precious to waste one moment, and she completely embraces the concept of happily ever after.


Ann cut her teeth on the classics of romance literature and is still passionate about the genre. Her day job is professor of English at a community college. She attended the University of California at Los Angeles, earning a BA in English Literature. At Humboldt State University, she earned two MAs—one in English Literature and another in Composition and Rhetoric. Once she moved east, she earned an MFA in Creative Writing from Vermont College. Since then, she has published poems and non-fiction in various small publications.

Now, here's Ann to share a writing tip with readers. 

Step One in Writing a Novel: Building Your Characters



My firm belief that a great story is character driven means I spend most of my plotting or outlining time on character development. When it’s time for me to start a new novel, I spend a full week on building my lead roles.


For the hero, I start with physical appearance, current occupation, family structure, childhood events, tragedies, triumphs, unmet goals, met goals, where he lived and lives currently, pets, pet peeves, past love-life and present love-life, one motto/maxim that drives him, and then I write a few pages titled “A Typical Day in the Life of…”


Answering these questions is a long and messy process, but lots of fun. Once I’ve written all that information down on my legal pad, I name him. His name should somehow reflect his character. I try a bunch of different combinations, ask my family, and take suggestions before I settle on a name. I always live with the name for a few days before I start drafting my story.


I follow a similar process for my heroine except I add an extra section on “Where (name) will be in Twenty Years.” My female protagonist always has a clear view of where she wants to be, and my male protagonist is living day by day, never forgetting past lessons.


Once I know so much about each character, I begin to imagine how they’ll meet on the first page of my novel. Their back-story is so rich in my mind, it’s easier to imagine them in a scenario that is exciting and has some risk and something at stake.


In my first contemporary romance novel, THE BILLIONAIRE'S BAUBLE, my hero is a rich oil company owner and CEO interviewing candidates for an executive assistant position; my heroine is trying to get the job. When she enters the office as part of the hiring process, she is shocked to find he’s the guy she met in a bar two years earlier, kissed, and never forgot. The story ensues. It is fun and sexy, and David and Sloane are people I hope my readers can love as much as I do.


If you want to write a novel, knowing your characters inside and out is key. Everything evolves from them. I promise: if you do the work up front to build rich characters, your story will be easier to write.


Thanks, Caroline, for allowing me to visit your blog and its readers. Readers, come visit me! I’d love to meet you!


Ann Montclair

Available now from Soul Mate Publishing

The blurb for BILLIONAIRE'S BAUBLE:

She wants a soul mate. He wants another bauble. But once fast-track billionaire David Grant meets modern day, home spun sweetheart Sloane Porter, he finds a gem too rare to discard.


The hero is David Grant, billionaire owner and CEO of Grant Oil. He meets Sloane Porter once, briefly, at a college bar in Fairbanks, Alaska, and their passions explode. She runs away after one dance, one kiss, but neither can forget the moments they shared, even though they don't know each other's names. Sloane decides to stay in Alaska in hopes of reuniting with her "mystery man." The novel opens two years after the kiss in the bar. Sloane, fresh out of college, trying to land a job that will keep her in Alaska, enters David's office, a final candidate for a position as an executive assistant. They are mutually shocked when they recognize one another, and again they let their incredible magnetism get the best of them. But Sloane won't run away this time, and she won't be any man's one night stand. David Grant doesn't know it, but the pretty bauble he seeks will become his most precious gem.

Buy link: http://www.soulmatepublishing.com/the-billionaires-bauble/

Learn more about Ann Montclair from her website http://www.annmontclair.com
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