Thursday, September 29, 2011
You Can't Always Get What You Want
Wednesday, September 28, 2011
Pep Rally
Whatever does that mean?
Well, for a writer who's been published as I have, it's in copies sold and royalties. These details will be another post for another time, but things have been pretty dismal the last couple of months. When one tells stories, the ultimate hope is that they'll be read. So, disappointment runs rampant when the results don't meet our expectations. It's definitely made me wonder whether continuing to write more material is worth the effort.
But then, I wouldn't be able to stop, because the stories won't stop coming...
So, the stories will continue to be written, and the skull will continue to get pounded against the wall until I've ended up in a bloody, unconscious mess...because that's what writing is. :-)
***
As a writer of science fiction action-adventure, T. M. Hunter’s stories have appeared in such publications as Ray Gun Revival, Residential Aliens and Golden Visions Magazine, and have received critical acclaim, twice (2007, 2009) receiving a top ten finish in the P&E Readers Poll. His two novels from Burst Books, Heroes Die Young and Friends in Deed, continue to receive a fantastic reception from his readers, as have his short story collection Dead or Alive (from ResAliens Press), his novella Seeker, and his brand new novel, The Cure. Learn more about T. M. Hunter, then read free excerpts and stories at AstonWest.com.
Tuesday, September 27, 2011
Are writers lonely?
How lonely are writers in reality?
There’s this romantic notion out there that writers are required to be secluded—working manically on their craft, perhaps drinking up a perfect storm and paying the ultimate success for their creativity by going off the deep end. How much of this is true or fable?
I’m asking all of you this question: Do you need absolute silence to write—to hear your muse? Or can you write amongst the fray—TV blaring, children crying and life in your face?
For me it varies. When I’m rested I can stand more noise and activity around me and work like it’s not there, but other times when I’m tired I get annoyed at the smallest sound. (I’m just a ball of fun to live with, not!)
I’d love to hear your thoughts on this!
Best, January Bain
For stories of vampires and romance. . .
Coming in 2012 Forever Man
Monday, September 26, 2011
TWV mega contest - week of 9/26



Showcase author(s):
Julie E. Painter
First Book giveaway (Mystery question):
Prize: Paperback of TANGLED WEB from Julie E. Painter at books-jepainter.com
Type contest: Answer mystery question to be entered for drawing
Mystery question: "In TANGLED WEB, How old was Catherine when she had her first child?"
Where is the answer: Visit author website & search the blurb/excerpts for novel
How do I win: Send your answer to author at snorkeljul@aol.com NLT Friday midnight
with subject line – “TWV Mega contest - TANGLED WEB”
Winner announced: Right here, next Monday
Rules/limitations:
(1) No purchase required. Answer to mystery question found on author's website.
(2) To be fair to everyone, you can only win one book during the mega contest.
(3) Because of postage, only US/Canada residents can play this one
Second Book giveaway (Mystery question):
Prize: CD of MORTAL COIL from Julie E. Painter at books-jepainter.com
Type contest: Answer mystery question to be entered for drawing
Mystery question: "In MORTAL COIL, what is Patti's Father's name?"
Where is the answer: Visit author website & search the blurb/excerpts for novel
How do I win: Send your answer to author at snorkeljul@aol.com NLT Friday midnight
with subject line – “TWV Mega contest - MORTAL COIL”
Winner announced: Right here, next Monday
Rules/limitations:
(1) No purchase required. Answer to mystery question found on author's website.
(2) To be fair to everyone, you can only win one book during the mega contest.
(3) Because of postage, only US/Canada residents can play this one
Last weeks winner
Congrats to follower "SincerelyEmmaM" - You won an E copy of BOLT ACTION from Victoria roder. Email your name to planetcrz@frontier.com and claim your prize NLT midnight this Friday.
Sunday, September 25, 2011
Tropical Storms and Brain Waves
So, I've been watching the weather lately, as one does when you live in the tropics, and taking note of the numerous tropical storms popping up like measles. With the convenience of WIFI, and devices like the iPods and Pads, even the trusty Blackberry, I can feed my addiction of checking out the weather. We'll not get into the other addiction I have, which is 'screen-addiction.' That's a whole other story!
This year, like the last, we've quickly run through the alphabet with naming the storms and hurricanes. We're all the way to the M's, with Maria who spent a glorious two-day stint sitting right over us. It had reached a point where I wished Maria would just 'ave' along and give us back the daylight. It rained, it blustered, it darkened the world, it thundered and left my poor kitty with the nervous shakes.
At least it wasn't like last year, when we ran into Tomas at the end of October. Ouch! We won't go there either.
The precursor of Maria's loitering arrived late in the night with the cracking of thunder and the roar of sudden rain. (It was the wee-wee hours where sudden noises are accompanied by vivid imaginary hallucination, like...thinking the AC unit was about to fall on my head). So, after being rudely awakened by Maria's bellow, my brains weren't quite ready to go back into a blissful coma. What does it do? Come up with a strange and quirky story which I ended up dreaming about. Now, I don't normally dream my story ideas, they just usually manifest here and there, with add-ons coming to me later as the idea blossoms.
This idea, well, I'm not so sure I want to write it, but if I do, it may very well end up as a short story. This is a little new to me, since I'm not very good at short stories at all. As for the genre, it's not going to be SF!! What, you say? Yeh, really. I'm thinking more along the lines of fantasy...like paranormal fantasy, maybe? (But...there's always room to geekerize it, right?) I took some notes later that morning, and had a read through, and then kind of winced. You could say it's a sort of fairy tale gone wrong, in a good way, of course. Then again, if I start writing it, it may just end up better as a storm-induced dream: addled and disjointed and completely laughable like a Dr. Suess tale.
The funny thing is, last year, when Tomas blew through and we were out of power for five days, I had a similar brain wave passing through my head. I'm tempted to drag out those notes and see what I can do with it. Hey, I may even incorporate to two and see what happens -- wait, then that would become like a Dr. Suess tale. (I'm beginning to think that storms agree with my creative process).
But until then, my weather-addiction is fed hourly, which also doubles to feed my addiction to the screen. And hopefully, somewhere in between that, I can join up the notes and get some writing done.
Cheers!
(End note: Tropical Storm Ophelia just sprouted up...oh, joy).
Saturday, September 24, 2011
Mom, Lie For Me. The Police Took My Computer.

If the police ever commandeered my computer, they would interrogate me for planning a murder. That is unless my mom agrees to lie for me and claim she did the searches. The law would find that most mystery or crime writers research poison in the forms of chemicals, medications, toxic plants and poisonous snakes. Searches for death by hanging, deadly gun shot wounds, fatal stab wounds, and the life and times of serial killers. Call us crazy, but our defense for our morbid computer searches is that we are the published authors of crime novels.
In my action thriller, Bolt Action, from Champagne Books, Detective Leslie Bolt is a smart talking, gun hording, motorcycle riding investigator forced to work a serial murder case with her sexy ex-lover. After a childhood of abuse suffered at the hand of her father, Leslie stashes a collection of pistols, revolvers, and even a Browning A-Bolt Stalker Rifle in her broom closet. The “State Quarter Killer” is taunting police but with the help of forensic science, Detective Bolt is hot on the trail.
Forensic science is the use of various techniques to analyze crimes, such as toxicology, autopsy techniques, computer and clay reconstruction, blood stains and splatter, DNA fingerprinting, and unique wounds and murder tools. Although Bolt Action is fiction I needed to research how an autopsy is preformed, weapons, psychological profiles, serial killers, and crime scene analysis. You might be a fan of CSI, but a better tool for research of forensic science is the internet, reference books, and expert interviews. Research is the making of believable fiction.
Feel free to visit me my website where you can read an excerpt of Bolt Action. View the video trailer http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EqcYL_G7h7s
Friday, September 23, 2011
AFTER THE TEARS
Angelica Hart and Zi
Just to give a little something different, we have provided a short story this week. We hope you enjoy it.
We are currently away until the end of the month, and won't have access to any computers, but we will reply to any comments upon our return. Have a great one!
AFTER THE TEARS
By:
Angelica Hart and Zi
She stood there for a long while, listening to the wind, the occasional eruptions of drizzle and eventually walked to the edge of the grave. She bent her head. “Bye Dad. I love you. I am already missing you.” Before she could move her head back, a tear rolled from her cheek and splunked upon the coffin surface punctuating the dirt cross. Everyone else had left, but she wasn't yet ready, she needed time with just Dad, just her and the man who had been her rock all of her life.
After awhile, she retreated about forty feet away but was still in view of the grave. She watched the caretakers lower his coffin, and then cover it with damp earth. She imagined him being welcomed home. Some of the soil splattered against the engraved name of Emily Watkins, Cyndy's mother. She had been passed before Cyndy could remember her. It had been just her and Dad.
Cyndy Watkins started at the graves and cried. Alone.
Would she always be so? Nearing thirty and being attractive, she had her share of dates, but she never clicked with anyone, never found that special love. Her dad threatened quite often to set her up with a blind date. He had a lady friend, who had a son, a real nice man with green eyes and a gentle manner. His friend had met Cyndy once, thought her perfect for her boy. Cyndy didn't remember the meeting, and would always manage to avoid any parentally arranged dates. Funny she thought of that now. Then again, while in the final stages of cancer, he had so worried that that she wasn't settled, as he put it. "Oh Dad," she whispered, and felt her chest tighten with the throbbing ache of emptiness.
Once the final shovel-full of earth was moved and raked smooth, the sun as if cued, began to push itself through the clouds slowly turning the dull pall of the mid-morn rain into a beautiful spring afternoon, almost magical, signifying a new beginning.
Cyndy continued to sob gently, sucking in shallow, painful breaths, allowing hurt to express itself.
Like the slow, intrusion of the sun a few moments before, a man’s voice encroached upon her grief. At first it was just a low murmur, then as if the wind had deliberately turned direction, it picked up the voice and brought it to her like a gift. She turned, surveyed the landscape but did not see anyone though she still heard it. The voice. Where? It danced upon the air. Playfully. Though obviously male, she could not discern what he was saying, just that he sounded happy with the buoyancy of an entertainer. Drawn, like a child to a puppet show, she moved toward the theatrical tones and intonations.
Back to her, he knelt there, right on a grave. She took a quick step sideways and hid behind a tall monolithic granite monument. Watching. Listening. A man, clad in a green slicker with the hood up rose, his face still hidden from view. He sat upon a green and white blanket that had been arranged neatly. He didn’t notice her. The blanket was perfectly square to the stone he faced. A brown wicker basket squatted to his left. Open. Food occupied two plates before him while adjacent the plates, she spotted two bottles of water. “A picnic?” she muttered, shaking her head, brows knitting.
An occasional laugh interrupted his loud speech. A gesture or two marked many of his sentences. Again, playful.
She thought, how inappropriate and insensitive. This was a cemetery, for goodness sake! What right did he have to be so disgraceful? So disrespectful? She moved closer with all intentions of saying something in a scolding Sunday school teacher way. She was just in the right mood to scold someone, even though a small voice told her she shouldn't. The closer she walked the more she began to hear even though the breeze kept distorting the intonations.
He sat Indian-legged with a leather-bound briefcase setting in his lap. He read from the case. Laughing. Teasing. Gesturing. Talking to the headstone as if it were a friend and loved one. Showing moments of seriousness. Stopping for emphasis. Sipping some water. Eating a grape. Looking down at his portfolio, studying a minute then talking again. Turning the pages slowly. Entertaining the stone.
His actions brought her pause. They were so wonderfully personal. Private. She felt the pull of embarrassment because they were so private.
She crouched behind another stone, listened to his stories, becoming engrossed when he talked about a baseball game he saw and the foul ball that bounced two seats away. A genuine heart-felt humanity emerged when he talked about a calico cat that got into his home and hid under his bed for two days, tormenting his dog. He finally caught her and found her a home, and he wished he had known her better. The ‘her’ she first thought was the cat. Then she realized it was the person buried. More tears emerged when she heard his voice crack under the abrupt intensity of emotion. “I truly miss you. I wish we had had more time. When it was just getting good, you were taken. I have been blessed to have you, but hurt that you are gone.”
New tears streamed down Cyndy's cheeks.
He rose. Collected his picnic. Kissed two of his fingers, touched the stone and said, “See you next year. Don’t go anywhere. Okay!”
Cyndy smiled at his humor remarking beneath her breath, “What a gentle, caring man.”
He walked away without ever looking in Cyndy’s direction. She waited until he was gone then curious, believing that it had to be his wife, approached the headstone. She read it and saw that the date of death was the same as today, but many years earlier. She calculated date of birth and death. It was his mother. A flash of bonding with the soul and spirit of the unknown man formed, a bond, born in the loss of a parent on the same date. Their date. This man she had been about to scold became a distant, even though unknown, friend. May 12th connected them. Forever.
Her tears stopped. Cyndy somehow didn’t feel quite as alone.
A year passed, she had forgotten about the man, but not about visiting her parents' graves. Unlike the day of the funeral, it was a glorious day, truly spring with the promise of summer. She knelt before the tombstones and began a long discourse about her work, her life, her lack of romance.
Suddenly a man's voice interrupted. "Care for some water?" He held out a water bottle. "My name's Charles."
She looked up into kind green eyes and remembered the voice, the tender modulated tones from the year before.
At that moment something clicked, something solid and right. "Thank you," she said, and instantly knew in a strange warm wash of certainty that she'd never be alone again.
In the heavens, Charles' mother and Cyndy's father grinned at each other. They finally managed the blind date their stubborn children had once refused.
****
We'd love to hear from anyone interested in what we do. Anyone who writes us at angeliahartandzi@yahoo.com and leaves an s-mail address, we will send you a gift and add you to any future mailings.
Angelica Hart and Zi
KILLER DOLLS ~ SNAKE DANCE ~ CHASING YESTERDAY
www.champagnebooks.com
STEEL EMBRACE by Vixen Bright and Zachary Zane
August 2011 http://www.carnalpassions.com/
THE FABLE OF SIN-SIN CINDERELLA Series
angelicahartandzi.com


Thursday, September 22, 2011
Someone Broke my Record

But I'm glad to report that Mary McCall's Highland Captive has broken that record and with astounding sells. I'm both relieved and jealous. Yeah, I'll admit to a bit of jealousy. On the other hand, it was always disconcerting to have a best selling book and have no idea how. Folks always wanted to know my secret. My only secret was timing. Yep, timing.
So many things fell into place at once. First, I won a three-day author chat at Romance Junkies, and I talked non-stop with readers asking tons of questions. It was a blast. That was before the loops were saturated with more writers than readers.
Secondly, my RWA chapter provided great support. They all bought a copy within the same week which put Celestial Dragon on the map at Fictionwise. Back then, you could rise pretty quickly on the charts just with a few sales as long as those sales were all on the same day and other books in the same genre weren't selling. (Keep in mind this was right after Christmas) And of course, once it had a high ranking on the chart, it was on the front page for all to see.
Thirdly, I think it had a killer title. I have to thank a critique partner for suggesting the title. And my publisher came up with a great tagline. I'd offered one, and she and the artist trimmed it.
Other things fell into place as well. Small but all geered toward one outcome. Sales. So - now I have a new goal. To reclaim my best selling position. Mwhahahah. Come on, Mary. Tell us your secret.
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
May I have some cheese with my whine?
There are no-no's like....
Don't announce it so openly whenever you receive a rejection. Other publishers you submit to out there will check your web presence and see exactly who didn't want your story before it came into their hands; they might reject you on principle.
OR
Don't rant online about getting a poor review. You may get hundreds of comments in your inbox for it, but they won't be good. Plus, you could ruin your entire brand as an author.
OR
Don't complain about problems with critique partners, beta rereads, editors, publicists, (fill in the blank). That's just bad business.
OR
Pretty much, don't complain at all.
But that makes me worry, if I only post about the good perks of my writing life, will that make other people hate me? "Oh, well look at Linda over there, announcing ANOTHER book sale. All she ever does is brag about how good she has it. The @#$!"
Or maybe everyone would think I've overdosed on my happy pill again if I only talk about positive points.
In writing, there are just as many downs as there are ups, just as many trials and tribulations as there are reasons to jump up and down and celebrate...if not more.
It's statically proven that for every query letter you write which will ultimately sell a book, you'll submit at least five more that will get you a rejection.
For every glowing, five-star review you get, there may be a scathing, one-star right around the corner.
For every time someone reads your novel and compliments it, another will no-doubt find the flaws.
And let's not get started on the waiting. As an author, you begin to wait from day one. Wait for the muse to hit, wait for critique partners to read your manuscript, wait for a response on your submission, wait for book covers, wait for edits, wait for release days, wait for reviews, wait for royalty statements. Do I really need to go on?
In blogging, we post our writing journals online as a way to connect with other people going through similar circumstances. We hope to find a kindred soul out there, someone who understands. We may also log our journey for others just beginning their adventure to read it as a learning tool.
So wouldn't it make sense to spell out all the pitfalls as much as we share our exciting, happy news?
Yes and no.
Of course at your lowest point you need others the most, you need that connection with someone else to help lift yourself back up. But you shouldn't do it to the point of harming yourself or others.
I'm one of those people who believes you should talk about the bad along with the good, in a tasteful way, so you can reveal the complete picture of what it's really like to be in your shoes. Then again, I also believe there should be some social restrictions with that sharing.
First, you should wait a day, a week, a month (whatever it takes) until you can step back and view your experience from a more objective point of view. If that simply cannot happen--you can't remain calm no matter how long it's been--then it isn't something you should make public. Find a single friend to confide in.
Second, generalize the event by keeping out times, places, numbers, titles, names. Protect the innocent...and guilty parties. If you want to talk about a rejection, maybe you could wait until the story contracts somewhere before mentioning how one, unnamed rejection letter wanted you to remove your favorite scene, and you stayed true to yourself.
Third, bash yourself a little. None of us are perfect. And in every encounter, we can look back afterward and think, "gee, if only I'd done this, maybe that wouldn't have happened." If you make light of yourself, slip in a joke about how you flubbed a little on your part, then your post won't appear like such an attack in any specific direction. It'll simply be a recounting of what happened.
Fourth, to go along with the third, put some humor--or maybe suspense--in it. You're posting this on a public forum with the express intent for others to read it, otherwise it'd go in a private diary. So, make it interesting for your reader, like they're in some fictional character's story, not a real-life author's bitch session.
Finally, focus it more internally than externally. Got a bad review? Don't strike out and call the reviewer a stinky-faced poo-poo head, because that only seems to make YOU look bad. Just explain how much it crushed your confidence. How will you ever go on to write again (or with a little less drama, if you prefer)? That's what the true meat of the problem is after all: how the experience made you feel.
Of course, these are all suggestions not hard-core rules. What works for one may not work for another.
I only wish a memorable ride to all who are taking the writing and blogging express--be they good days or bad. I understand both sides, and I'm certain others can too. Please share them with me!!
Tuesday, September 20, 2011
The Importance Of Book Covers
probably turn the book over and read the blurb. You might even open the book and read
the excerpt. The reason you pick the book up in the first place is probably the cover.
There's a lot involved in a good cover. If the story is about a murder, a depiction of
blood or some kind of weapon is a draw. Angels, wispy creatures might indicate a
fantasy, soldiers, or military equipment would let you assume the book was a war
story. A man and a woman together, especially in an embrace, says this is probably
a romance.
Over the years, I've had eighteen book covers. Some have been wonderful, and some,
tragically, were next to useless.
Why? A lot of reasons. The first is probably the cover tells you nothing about the
book. Or the artist didn't do a good job. But other factors play into what people see
when they look at a cover, especially a romance. The age of the characters, the scene,
even the models' clothing.
I learned a lot about covers with my fourth book for another publisher. My third
book had been well received, but number four was a dud. I didn't understand why.
I had a friend who was well acquainted with a local book distributor. I ask if she
would approach him with a list my questions.
What I found out blew me away. The distributor said the cover of the book didn't fit
the kind of stories I wrote with the hero and heroine in what looked like modern
clothing. I didn't write contemporary romance nor did the book cover fit the series
of which it was a part. On top of that, my cover was a sunset scene, and another
author had a cover with a sunset, same color, so the distributors picked that book
over mine. It seemed the color of the cover was important too.
This friend told me the gentleman in question said the two big reasons my book
didn't get distributed (so, of course people couldn't buy it) was the cover was too
modern for the series and there was another sunset book cover which looked more
historical than mine and therefore would sell better. So, my book didn't make it to
the book shelves.
Today with the internet, that second reason doesn't apply like it did with print books, but the first reason really is important. For a book to draw a reader's attention, in print or in digital, the depiction on that cover must draw the reader. And that's why my latest cover for Champagne Books is absolutely wonderful.
There are five men on the cover and my book is part of a series about the lives of the five Brynn Ffrydd brothers. My heroine is shy, my hero a 'take no prisoners' kind of guy. And weather effects the story so the blues are significant. Just another perfect cover from Champagne Books. Thanks Champagne artists for all the wonderful book covers you've done that bear my name! You'll never know how grateful I am.
Monday, September 19, 2011
TWV mega contest - week of 9/19


Showcase author(s):

Linda Rettstatt & Victoria Roder
First Book giveaway (Mystery question):
Prize: Paperback of WINNERS CHOICE from Linda Rettstatt at lindarettstatt.com
Type contest: Answer mystery question to be entered for drawing
Mystery question: "In SHOOTING INTO THE SUN, what happened as Rylee is ready to take a photo?"
Where is the answer: Visit author website & search the blurb/excerpts for novel
How do I win: Send your answer to author at lindarettstatt@yahoo.com NLT Friday midnight
with subject line – “TWV Mega contest”
Winner announced: Right here, next Monday
Rules/limitations:
(1) No purchase required. Answer to mystery question found on author's website.
(2) To be fair to everyone, you can only win one book during the mega contest.
(3) Because of postage, only US/Canada residents can play this one
Second Book giveaway (Follower drawing)
Prize: E copy of BOLT ACTION from Victoria roder at victoriaroder.com
Type contest: Random drawing from subscribed followers of the TWV blog
How does contest work: Simply subscribe as a follower. Go to left side of blog screen near
bottom, and sign up as a follower by Friday midnight
How do I win: A winner is drawn at random from all followers Saturday.
Winner announced: Next Monday winner will be posted and asked to send email.
Rules/limitations:
To be fair to everyone, you can only win one book during the mega contest.
Last weeks winners
1. No one won the paperback from Jude Johnson
2. Congrats to follower "Queenlollie" - You won an E copy of WITHIN THE MIST from Jude Johnson. Email your name to "AuthorJude@comcast.net" and claim your prize NLT midnight this Friday.
Friday, September 16, 2011
Surfing Crests and Troughs

Writing is not a rollercoaster in my experience. It's a surfing marathon. Sometimes you're riding high, shooting the curl, speeding along with an exhilarating rush. Great reviews and hot sales makes you feel like The Big Kahuna.
For some of you who were alive and at least semiconscious in the sixties: "HAHAHAHAHAHAHA WIPE OUT!" preceded banging tom tom drums and a twanging guitar. [Check it out here, young whippersnappers: Wipe Out ] As a writer, Wipe Out plays when that scene just won't work, everything you compose seems to be fetid fertilizer, and your marketing attempts are waterlogged and flat.
You have to be careful not to let your surfboard smack you in the head when you wipe out, and you have to be diligent as a writer not to obsess and dwell on down times. Everything and everyone has dormant and fallow seasons. Another wave will come along. Your decision is whether to wait for it in the water or kick back with the dudes and a Corona on the beach.
So hang loose. Surf will up again soon. It's a good time to re-wax the board...
Christmas in July
As I wrote scenes for Reinventing Christmas, I drew on my reserves of memory from my own childhood Christmases. I remember snow that fell in several inches if not feet. Kids pulling sleds as they disappeared behind the mounds of white piled along sidewalks, heading for the nearest hill for sledding. Rough-hewn snow people bearing various sized handprints and dressed in borrowed hats and scarves, lumps of coal for eyes and sticks serving as arms. Smaller bits of stone created wobbly smiles. An electric Santa waving cheerily from the rooftop.
Our own house would be lit, inside and out, with strings of colored lights and the golden glow of electric candles on each and every windowsill. A pine (real pine, not plastic) wreath hung on the front door, and the aromas of home-baked apple pie and my grandmother’s orange and spice cookies hung in the air.
With the exception of this past week, the heat has been unrelenting in my area, and worse for some of you in Texas and the southwest. Needless to say, writing about a Pennsylvania Christmas had a cooling effect, even if it did stir up bittersweet memories of childhood. In Reinventing Christmas, M.J. Rich returns home to Pittsburgh for Christmas, expecting the warm and fuzzy experience she has always known, she is shocked to find family traditions that have been slightly twisted or foregone completely. She discovers you can go home again as long as you don’t expect things to remain as you had left them.
I’m determined to reinvent Christmas for myself this year—dig back into my box of memories and make my Mississippi apartment a little more like home and Christmas past.
Linda Rettstatt
2010 Author of the Year - Champagne Books
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| My Books |
Thursday, September 15, 2011
Battle Dancer and the end of a series

This month marks the end of a series (and one spin-off) that I started back in 2008. The "Blade Dancer" series follows an alien female's coming of age - from soldier to pivotal figure in the history of three races. Up to now, I have examined things like the effect of being thrust into greatness upon both family and friends - as well as looking at prejudices and how imperfections in one's character can grow under the strain of being a world leader.
With Battle Dancer I come to the end of the story arc by concentrating on the character herself. What does it do to a person when they are given ultimate authority and the means to execute it? How far do you push until Savior becomes Destroyer? Can there be redemption, and if so, from what quarter?
Due out in December of this year, Battle Dancer strives to offer that answer while bringing to rest many of the subplots carried throughout the series. Mikial is at her fiery best, and her very worst as she seeks to return her Me'Aukin allies to their home world. You get to meet many of the characters introduced over the series one final time, and see some closure as Mikial ultimately gets what she deserves. And yes, I put the battle in Battle Dancer, with a harrowing look at where futuristic combat is heading.
Saying goodbye to a cast of characters I've lived with for so long isn't easy, but the cure is obvious - start something new in a completely different venue. I have already started work on a fantasy (yes, you read that right), but trust me - no sparkly vampires. No elves, dragons, fae, or any other trope you can think of. I want to bring fantasy back down to a slight shimmer off of reality. What is it about? Gonna hold that in for now, but if you listen in the stillness of my imagination, you might hear a locomotive's long mournful whistle.
The journey continues, and beyond my present project there is this little girl who crash landed on an alien world where the rain kills and forests sing.
Kerry
www.kmtolan.com
Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Dark Night of the Soul
It's a lot for an author to ask his or her readers to care about the "hero" when he's committed an unthinkable crime. Heroes are supposed to rescue, not terrorize. However, books shouldn't just reflect the lighter side of human nature. People screw up and make bad choices. They're driven by obsessions and haunted by past traumas. If they've been victimized, they often perpetuate the abuse, sometimes even switching into the role of the victimizer. One of my favorite themes to visit as a writer is the path that a victim of childhood abuse chooses as an adult. Usually I will have two people who have been victimized and showcase what happens when one chooses to perpetuate the abuse, and the other gains strength and wisdom from the experience. I understand that my portrayal of these choices will make some people really uncomfortable, but I want it known that this does not stem from an exploitative or perverse motive. I had a point to make that as awful as Jared's genetic disease is, his psychological issues are worse. As a reviewer so poignantly pointed out, "There are no monsters to blame the evil on, just the human soul and the depths to which it can sink." The inherent message which I hope will come across despite all the ugliness, is that we all have the power to self-destruct or not, and we can't use our traumatic pasts as excuses for depravity.
If you've come on the journey with me so far, I hope you'll hang in there to see it through to the end. I promise that there will be a lot of incredible things that happen on the way, not just the traumatic ending. I also promise that my next fantasy will be much lighter fare; I think we could all use a breather.
Many thanks to Darkiss Reviews who just gave me the most amazing review of this final volume, along with hope that the message will get through after all. http://www.darkissreads.com/2011/09/jared-dunefaellan-captain-of-kings.html

Ashley J. Barnard
Dark Fantasy with a Contemporary Twist
www.ashleyjbarnard.com
Tuesday, September 13, 2011
Where do Stories Come From?
The premise for my December Champagne Books release came from a dream. A woman, after having been frozen for many years, is fished from the sea by fishermen. Taken to an undersea futuristic world, she's restored to health, and then must strive to live in a foreign environment. Here is a blurb for Born in Ice.
rebirth to learn her son is dead, and her daughter's whereabouts is unknown. The year is 2155. A man's soothing voice and gray eyes haunt her drug induced dreams. When she recovers, she meets their owner and finds her heart in danger. But, a relationship isn’t a consideration; she must find her daughter.
I hope you'll pick up a copy in December. Thank you Trisha FitzGerald for the beautiful cover.
Happy Reading and Writing!
Linda
Monday, September 12, 2011
TWV mega contest - week of 9/12

Showcase author(s): 
Jude Johnson
First Book giveaway (Mystery question):
Prize: Paperback of DRAGON & HAWK from Jude Johnson at jude-johnson.com
Type contest: Answer mystery question to be entered for drawing
Mystery question: "In DRAGON & HAWK what is the name of the Apache Medicine Woman?"
Where is the answer: Visit author website & search the blurb/excerpts for novel
How do I win: Send your answer to AuthorJude@comcast.net NLT Friday midnight
with subject line – “TWV Mega contest”
Winner announced: Right here, next Monday
Rules/limitations:
(1) No purchase required. Answer to mystery question found on author's website.
(2) To be fair to everyone, you can only win one book during the mega contest.
(3) Because of postage, only US/Canada residents can play this one
Second Book giveaway (Follower drawing)
Prize: E copy of WITHIN THE MIST from Jude Johnson at jude-johnson.com
Type contest: Random drawing from subscribed followers of the TWV blog
How does contest work: Simply subscribe as a follower. Go to left side of blog screen near
bottom, and sign up as a follower by Friday midnight
How do I win: A winner is drawn at random from all followers Saturday.
Winner announced: Next Monday winner will be posted and asked to send email.
Rules/limitations:
To be fair to everyone, you can only win one book during the mega contest.
Last weeks winners
1. Congrats to Abi from ND. - You won a BLIND CONSENT paperback from Michael Davis
2. Congrats to follower "muminthemiddle" - You won an E copy of SHADOW OF GUILT from Michael Davis. Email your name to author at General@Davisstories.com and claim your prize NLT midnight this Friday.
Sunday, September 11, 2011
Ten Years
Okay, I admit it. The jig is up, so I may as well confess. I write Romances. Which was bound to happen, I suppose, since I’ve been called a “Romantic” for longer than I can or care to remember. I love babies, ballads, rainbows, fuzzy kittens, rippling streams, sunny days, my family, and chocolate. And those who know me best, know that I give my heart unconditionally.
I’m also one of those annoyingly optimistic people with a Pollyanna personality. I much prefer to think my glass is half-full rather than half-empty, and I’d rather look at the world through rose-colored glasses than be a “Doom and Gloom“ type of person. I always remind myself that things could be worse.
Plus, I find people -- all sizes and shapes, blondes or redheads, ages and gender -- fascinating. And I truly like almost everyone.
Which boils down to this: It is absolutely impossible for me to understand hate like that which will forever blacken this date, September 11, on my calendar.
Still, I have tried to find, within my own mind, some justification for the slaughter-- and it was nothing less -- of so many average, everyday, American citizens.
But there is none.
September 11, 2001 - One more of those terrible days that will live in infamy.
--Ramona Butler
Saturday, September 10, 2011
Defining Choices
Incredibly good people as well as depraved individuals exist in the real world, and sociologists, psychiatrists, other scientist, and even biographers have studied the cause for their behavior. These have been studied and well documented. A childhood filled with abuse and neglect might lead to criminal behavior, but not always. Privilege and love do not guarantee a sterling character for a child. No one makes the right choice all the time, and every choice a person makes not only marks them, but also those involved with them both close and distant.
Existence is inherently dangerous, and everyone is defined by the choices they make. This knowledge can provide authors a guide for fictional characters.

Have you ever seen an old cartoon with an angel perched on one of a character's shoulder, and a devil on the other? It is a perfect representation to tell us every individual has a propensity for unbelievable evil, and another for amazing good. We all make choices, both good and bad, even angels. Just consider the Devil, one concept of total evil, who began as Lucifer, supposedly one of God's favorite angles and the bringer of light.
Every choice comes layered with good fortune and misfortune. It's a matter of that pesky free will clause given mankind. Taking into account infinite variety, Murphy's Law, Chaos Theory, human nature, and our propensity for misunderstanding, and the result of any choice's good often becomes murky at best. What will result in cause and effect, good or evil, is not clearly marked on any collection of options. Sometimes what seems like a clear choice for good that becomes the opposite. Choices make angels demons, but can they make demons angels?
We have learned genetics can produce people prone to 'evil' choices. We've all heard of nature versus nurture, and certainly psychiatry has proved many qualities are found in every psyche. But not everyone with a genetic predisposition for certain behaviors or a psychological problem lending to antisocial behavior becomes a sociopath. Each condition only shows a likely choice the person will make, not the actual choice, and that is the territory where unexpected heroes and villains occur.
The choices that a character makes creates that character's personality, and provides a direct link to their believability in the story. So when creating in-depth characters, it seems logical to look at each character and see what his or her choices have been and where they have led. Within the characters' choices the author will discover their mistakes, their secrets, and their persona. All those choices provide dynamic fodder for plots that twist and turn like the proverbial Gordian's knot.
Stone House Farm
Rhobin's Rambes
Friday, September 9, 2011
Evolution


Michael W. Davis
There’s not a day goes by I don’t marvel at the growth of my Grand Daughter (GD) as an evolving human being. She may be only five, but what a personality. My wife and I try to encourage openness to new ideas, to the variance of others, and yet maintain an independence for the principles she holds dear, even at her age.
I was babysitter her last weekend and as I watched her interact with her Mama (my wife) I drifted to the future, of what she’d become, someone that would do the right thing when all others turned their heads, someone that would confront lies and political spinning, someone that understood her relevance in the fabric of humanity. An epiphany flashed for an instant and I realized that very evolution, when a child matures over time into a responsible adult, is the same process, as writers and readers we relate to as we absorb a fictional story.
For both the hero and heroine, we hold our breath, cry and cheer as we watch the character evolve from someone detached from there surroundings to a person aware of their own strengths and vulnerabilities. That evolution is part of why we clutch a story to our chest and sigh when we reach the last page, hoping the author will provide another installment.
I experienced that emotion several weeks ago when I delivered some of my novels to a local gift shop and both the owner and one of their employees greeted me at the door. Seems they had finished the novels I dropped off last time and wanted more. They began to query me about the characters, where they can from, were they based on real people, did they actually endure that transition reflected in the story. Now that was neat, the fact that readers would become so absorbed in your story as the characters evolved into actual living breathing humans. They too had enjoyed watching the evolution process from a fictional character to a real person. So cool.
Big Mike
Michael W. Davis (Davisstories.com)
Author of the year, 2008 & 2009
Shadow of Guilt, “To each crossing of paths, there is a reason.”
Blind Consent, “The answers are buried in the secrets of the past.”
Forgotten Children, “Only Sara knows the truth.”
Tainted Hero, “Sometimes good people do bad things.”
The Treasure, “A lonely heart can impair one’s judgment.”
Veil of Deception, “Sometimes truth cuts deeper than a lie.”
Thursday, September 8, 2011
Energy Vampires

Energy Vampires
We’ve all gone through this -- someone nearby sucks the life out of us. When it’s a family member, we have to draw strong boundaries. When it’s someone we work with or outside the immediate circle, it’s still sometimes difficult to disengage.
Here are some tips:
--Why is the person’s action affecting you so deeply that it’s sucking the life out of you? What is under the response that the actual person triggers? Does the person remind you of something negative? Does the action mirror something you thought you left behind and is now rearing its ugly head again?
--How did the person get past your defenses? In order to function, we layer on certain protections. If someone is an energy vampire, they’ve found a way through. Figure out what that is and plug it up.
--Is there any way you can change or lessen your response? If you’re forced to deal with the person regularly, you may need to figure that out. Just because someone throws an emotional cow pattie at you doesn’t mean you have to let it hit you. You can step back and let it fall on the ground instead. For instance, let’s you work with a “drama llama” (someone in one of my classes came up with that name) who finds you a sympathetic ear and regularly dumps on you. You’re sitting there, having a perfectly nice day, and Drama Llama whines at you, the moves on, feeling relieved, while your day is dragged down. We all need a sympathetic ear. We all need someone with whom to brainstorm. But the Drama Llama doesn’t want solutions and won’t do the same for you when you have a bad day. The Drama Llama wants to unload her bad stuff on you and take in your good energy. One thing I’ve learned to do is, after about the third sentence, visibly glaze over and interrupt in a very neutral tone, saying, “How sad for you. Coffee?” and change the subject. If it’s not a life-or-death situation, sometimes finding the humor in it also helps. That’s always delicate ground, because people’s senses of humor vary, and you don’t want to be cruel.
--Is this someone with whom you can be honest? Can you say, “Let’s only complain about work-related matters (or personal matters) during X time and talk about fun stuff at other times”? Can you say, “Since you don’t really want my advice, maybe you need to talk to someone else about this”? Can you say, “I”m sorry, I have to finish this for my boss. Can we talk later?”
--Does the person have power over you? Is there a way to lessen that power? I once had a publisher who would regularly call me (drunk) and expect me to spill my guts on personal things that were none of her business. I explained that I was rarely reachable by phone (true -- I hate the telephone and it’s off most of the time) and didn’t answer when her number appeared on Caller ID. If it was work-related, I responded to her message with an email. Telling her that I didn’t feel comfortable discussing certain topics with her only made it worse. Needless to say, the company went under. You can develop deep friendships with professional colleagues, but you can’t force intimacy.
The most important thing to do is find a way to compassionately disengage. You don’t want to be cruel, but you can’t let someone be an emotional parasite. You especially can’t allow it when you’re a writer, because you need your store of emotion to pour into your work. There are times when, in order to protect the work, you must be ruthless.
--Annabel Aidan is a full-time writer who publishes under half a dozen names in fiction and non-fiction. Her romantic suspense, ASSUMPTION OF RIGHT, is available in digital and print formats from www.champagnebooks.com. Webpage: www.devonellingtonwork.com/annabelaidan.html.
Monday, September 5, 2011
TWV mega contest - week of 9/5

Showcase author(s): Michael Davis
First Book giveaway (Mystery question):
Prize: BLIND CONSENT Paperback from Michael Davis at Davisstories.com
Type contest: Answer mystery question to be entered for drawing
Mystery question: "In BLIND CONSENT what year& make car do May and Julie have?"
Where is the answer: Visit author website & search the blurb/excerpts for novel
How do I win: Send your answer to General@Davisstories.com NLT Friday midnight
with subject line – “TWV Mega contest”
Winner announced: Right here, next Monday
Rules/limitations:
(1) No purchase required. Answer to mystery question found on author's website.
(2) To be fair to everyone, you can only win one book during the mega contest.
(3) Because of postage, only US/Canada residents can play this one
Second Book giveaway (Follower drawing)
Prize: E copy of SHADOW OF GUILT from Michael Davis at Davisstories.com
Type contest: Random drawing from subscribed followers of the TWV blog
How does contest work: Simply subscribe as a follower. Go to left side of blog screen near
bottom, and sign up as a follower by Friday midnight
How do I win: A winner is drawn at random from all followers Saturday.
Winner announced: Next Monday winner will be posted and asked to send email.
Rules/limitations:
To be fair to everyone, you can only win one book during the mega contest.
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Autumn Joy
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| The Cobbler at Loch Long |
http://romygemmell.blogspot.com/
http://ros-readingandwriting.blogspot.com/
Dangerous Deceit, Champagne Books and Amazon
Friday, September 2, 2011
What Not to Do At a Book Signing
I do everything wrong the first time around. I like to say it is because I am strong advocate of learning by doing. But it is more likely that I’m actually just very lazy and tend to plunge into things. I leap empty handed into almost all situations and hope for the best. I addressed book signing this way and I learned a lot about what not to do from myself and a lot about what to do from those around me so that now I feel like I have a plan when I go out to sign books. I still have mistakes to make, but at least I know the major things not to do. Most of my book signings come at this time of year. I’m an autumn person and Halloween is a good time for the darker tone of my books. It is easy to mix the publicity for my book signings in with the Halloween decorations. So here are the things I’ve learned from my mistakes and the things I plan to do to make this year’s book signings a little better. Thursday, September 1, 2011
Fan Expo Is Not Just For Comic Books
My intention was to connect with a couple of author pals and support their books. I expected an expanse of booths and hundreds of people milling around, but nothing prepared me for what I experienced.
We took the subway to Union Station and followed the signs that led to the Metro Toronto Convention Centre. Several Expo volunteers were already on hand to direct us to the area where we could buy tickets. I expected a lineup at a ticket window just outside the venue, but we were asked to proceed down Simcoe Street, along the side of the Centre, and into a parking garage.
As the crowd got thicker and the temperature rose, I couldn't help but feel were being herded onto some mysterious intergalactic vessel, never to be seen again.
We finally got inside, and boy oh boy... was it huge!
Exhibitors from Warner Brothers, Disney, TeleToons, Space Channel... I could go on but you get the picture... as well as dozens of comic book and collectible retailers took up the centre of the huge building. Along the edges I found Artists Ally, booths rented by local artists who specialized in comic books, fan art and Anime.
I was pleased to see several independent/small presses represented, as well as Canadian divisions of big publishers like Penguin and Harper Collins, hawking books from the SFF and Paranormal genres. Champagne's new imprint, Burst, would feel right at home.
There, I met up with my friend Lesley Livingston and had my ARC of Once Every Never signed.
In the lobby and upstairs, I saw Ghost Busters, Steampunk Society, Star Wars, and other displays. I met up with Adrienne Kress at the Steampunk Society booth, where she displayed her bestselling children's books Alex and the Ironic Gentleman, and Timothy and the Dragon's Gate.
And lastly, I must comment on... THE COSTUMES! They were incredible. I couldn't stop staring at the amazing effort fans put into their favourite characters.
There was too much to take in during one day. I can see now why people buy passes for all four days. Maybe I'll go back next year and just walk around... in a COSTUME...? Maybe. We'll see.



















