Monday, April 30, 2012

Granny Pannies are not the bad guy

 Good Morning my fine readers. Today is Monday, the beginning of a new week, and almost the beginning of a new month. With that I've decided to begin anew with the blog. Once again I'll be going into a bit of a schedule. And to start off this new schedule I introduce the Caveat Queen. Well yeah she's a queen as if a diva would associate with anyone less. I digress. Her highness is a writer from my local writer's guild and a woman who essays I come to highly respect. However, unlike most royalty shes is a bit shy. Which is why I refer to her title. Below and hopefully for now on she will share with us her royal musings each Monday. But just to give her a little incentive I think that comments would really help her confidence and reveal or identity.



I had a bad underwear experience today.  I know it seems a small thing, but at 6:00 this morning it was a pretty damn big deal.

Monday, April 23, 2012

How Jordan Davis Was Born

 
How Jordan Davis Was Born
Alyssa Lyons

I’m often asked where I got the idea for Jordan Ashley Davis and the series. The truth is both humorous and bizarre.

While living in Pittsburgh, my mother, who lived with us, died and was cremated. I hauled her ashes from Pittsburgh to Bern, Switzerland, and then back to Virginia.

About four years after she died, my sister and I got together in San Francisco, where she lived. My mother had always wanted her ashes scattered in front of the Pacific Coast Stock Exchange. Unfortunately, during the decade since she’d been there, the trees no longer existed. So, one day at three in the morning, my sister and I dressed in black, put camo on our faces, and headed for the gardens in front of City Hall with Mom’s ashes and trowels in hand.

Unlike Jordan, we escaped without arrest.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Attention Attention: Hey Y'a'll look over here! The Belle has an announcment



Good morning Ya'll!!

Over the last month you have received some amazing guest blog posts. This was all part of my "Guest Post Win a Kindle" month long event. However, there were some hiccups. 

Such as my internet forcing me to institute a cursing jar because of it's unreliability. Or the fact that my email (Yahoo) must have heard about said cursing jar and wanted to build it's content. Or maybe just maybe Blogger who decided not to let me post or comment or share my own blog for say own and off a couple of weeks. 

But I digress. 

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Christine Hughes and her Muse


My Muse
Every once in a while I hear a song that throws a scene into my head. It could be a song I've heard a million times before, it could be a song I'm hearing for the first time. Sometimes, I'll be in my car, sometimes I'm browsing through the iTunes store and sometimes I'm curled up on the couch watching something I've dvr'd. It doesn't matter where I am or what I'm doing or if I've heard the song a million times before, when that scene pops into my head, I need a pencil and paper immediately.
There was one song in particular that carved out a path for TORN. I don't remember the date I first heard the song but I do remember exactly what I was doing - watching Vampire Diaries. It was the Founder's Day episode. (If you watch, then you remember. If you don't, you should.)  In this particular episode, Stefan went a little nutso and Damon had to step in and dance with Elena. The song they danced to was "All I Need" by Within Temptation. I'm not sure what it was about the song, maybe I was influenced my the scene in the show, but I knew my main character, Samantha, needed to feel the emotion I pictured when I heard that song.
At the time, I had only a few pages completed. I looked up the song, found the video on YouTube and downloaded it from iTunes. Then I searched for a few more songs and eventually had a playlist of a hundred or so that I would shuffle when I wrote. Sometimes, I would add a few more songs, delete one or two that didn't match the vibe I was going for.
But every time my fingers hit the keys on my mac, I needed to hear that playlist.
Mind you, I am in no way musically inclined. I can't hold a note and can't play any more than chopsticks on a piano. But I can, like many others, feel the emotion in a song. Not every song and not every time, but music has become such a huge part of my writing, I can't imagine writing without it.
If you have any favorite songs that inspire you, feel free to comment below. I love to hear about new music. Maybe I'll add it to my next playlist.
~Christine

 



 
TORN BLURB

When Samantha's father dies and she he was an angel because of what he was protecting,  she must join the fight between two groups of fallen angels, the Faithful and the Exiled, in a race to save humanity. In spite of the unforgivable betrayal of her best friend, the newly acknowledged love for her guardian angel, the face to face confrontation of the dark angel who killed her father and the growing need to allow darkness to take over her being, Samantha has been charged making the choice between fighting alongside the Faithful or succumbing to the darkness of the Exiled.



Friday, April 20, 2012

All I Needed to Know about Being Bad I Learned From Soap Operas…



All I Needed to Know about Being Bad I Learned From Soap Operas…
by Jami Gray

My BFF and I were chatting over our Passion Tea Lemonades made by our favorite baristas the other day when our conversation turned towards the demise of the soap opera.  You know what I’m talking about. Whether you want to admit that you ever watched (or maybe still do!) those oldie but goodies with familiar names like “General Hospital”, “One Life to Live”, “As The World Turns”, and “All My Children”, they seem to be going the way of 8 track tapes.  Wait, is that too old? Okay, the way of the cassette tapes (better, right?).

Thursday, April 19, 2012

Award-winning author Bev Irwin showcases Ghostly Justice



Fifteen-year-old Daria Brennan doesn’t want to hear people’s thoughts. She doesn’t           want to see ghosts or talk to dead people. And she definitely doesn’t want to help Amanda solve her forty-year old murder. But Amanda wants revenge, and Daria is the first human contact she’s had since the day she died. Now the killer is after Daria and her friends. Can they solve this Amanda’s murder in time, or will they become the next victims?

Read Reviews and excerpts.  Buy links below.



 Award-winning author Bev Irwin lives in London, Ontario, with three assorted cats, one that hid in her car when she moved from a farm and two others dropped off by her daughter five on two different occasions. Her three children have flown the coup. But her granddaughter, Jasmine, is a frequent visitor. 
As a registered nurse, she likes to add a touch of medical to her romance and mystery novels. She writes YA, children's, and poetry. She prefers spending time in her garden, writing, and reading to being in the kitchen. 
Her debut novel, WHEN HEARTS COLLIDE, a contemporary romance came out in December of 2011 with Soul Mate Publishing under the pen name of Kendra James. Irwin's YA paranormal novel GHOSTLY JUSTICE will be released by Black Opal Books on April 14th, 2012. MISSING CLAYTON, a suspense novel, with be also published with Black Opal Books later this year.



Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Sense or Sensation: Revisiting Stories That First Stole Your Heart

Today on the blog I'm just thrilled to introduce Jami Jean Welebob. She describes herself as a " a writer of historical horror and irredeemably bloody romance." She is a hoot and I'm happy to more info on her below. 

Sense or Sensation: Revisiting Stories That First Stole Your Heart

Let it be known that I, the professional charlatan, am very much in touch with my inner child.  Not only does this serve me well in earning my daily bread, but being able to connect with those first feelings of pure delight continues to inspire and enhance my passion for storytelling.  Yet, as are all of us who are doomed to roam this earth, I have grown up.  My tastes have grown more sophisticated.  I appreciate, and in many ways prefer, the various shades of grey in which I see the world now as opposed to the rigid black and white of my youth.  Thus, my fiction has matured in this manner. 
Recently, however, one of my first loves has returned.  The Phantom of the Opera, the musical, celebrated its 25th anniversary with spectacular fanfare and a lavish restaging.  Needless to say, I was intrigued.  Phantom introduced me to my first love triangle and the idea that romance isn’t always a beautiful thing.  It had been so long since I had given any serious thought to the story or score.  Suddenly the mere suggestion (aka flashy advertisement) incited a burning desire to visit my first love once again.
Phantom was every bit as beautiful a production as I remembered.  The updated effects were well placed, such as the addition of screens instead of relying on small mirrors and improved pyrotechnics.  The soaring music made my spine tingle, and I was a 13-year-old girl all over again by the end of Christine’s operatic debut, “Think of Me.”  Enraptured, I watched the Phantom lead her down into the bowels of the opera house.  I sat alongside them in the gondola gliding across the misty lake.  I could almost feel the Phantom tentatively caressing me as he held Christine close during “Music of the Night.”  And I could feel the excitement as Christine reached out and lifted his mask.  Then my childhood idols came crashing down.  The Phantom confronts Christine singing, “Fear can turn to love.  You’ll learn to see to find the man behind the monster. . .”  I realized that the Phantom was a stalker!  As the musical progressed, none of the characters behaved with the nuances I remembered.  Christine, instead of being torn between mysterious excitement and the comforts of a traditional love affair, appeared kind of ditzy.  What the hell was she really feeling?  There was no indication of conflict.  She seemed truly afraid of the Phantom most of the time and rather ambivalent about Raoul outside of his ability to protect her.  This did not create dramatic tension, for the choice was far too obvious.  No one would choose fear.  This was not the complex situation of fraught tragic figures I remembered. 
So what does all of this mean beyond confirming that I am indeed growing old?  Overall, I still enjoyed the musical as much as ever.  It was an opportunity to figure out what the real hooks were for me in this classic love story.  As it turns out, sensation wins out over sense in this case.  If you can craft a beautiful enough façade, your audience will overlook a million weaknesses in your characters and plot and if they are like me, return again and again for more.  Of course fog machines, fireworks, and a full orchestra helped The Phantom of the Opera; while all storytellers have to work with is words.  Writing is a solitary task.  Enjoy, as I do, wielding ultimate power over the worlds you create without having to worry over a budget, collaborate with composers, or placate prissy prima donnas.  Just remember that it is up to you alone to command the love of your readers. 
If you’d like to hear more about my adventures, the true, the untrue, and the many in-betweens, please visit my blog, The Professional Charlatan, or friend me, Jamie Jean Welebob Craven, on Facebook or follow me via LinkedIn.  




A former Army brat, Christine Hughes moved quite often. She spent much of her time losing herself in books and creating stories about many of the people she'd met. Falling in love with literature was easy for her and she majored in English while attending college in New Jersey.
Not sure where her love of reading and writing fit, she became a middle school English teacher. After nine years of teaching others to appreciate literature, she decided to take the plunge and write her first novel. Now at home focusing on making writing her new career, she spends her time creating characters and plot points instead of grading papers.

Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Heroine Interview aka Excon






Fresh out of a Pennsylvania penitentiary armed with a marketing degree, Kate Neilson heads to Wyoming anticipating an anonymous new beginning as a guest-ranch employee. A typical twenty-five-year-old woman might be looking to lasso a cowboy, but her only desire is to get on with life on the outside—despite her growing interest in the ranch owner. When she discovers a violent ex-lover followed her west, she fears the past she hoped to hide will imprison her once again.



Monday, April 16, 2012

When Characters Take Over




When Characters Take Over
(And Mama Chin’s Quick and Easy Cinnamon Rolls Recipe)


Thanks Bri, for this great opportunity.

Today is about one of writers’ occasional but major frustrations: when characters in a novel draft suddenly appear in a book and take over, sometimes a scene, sometimes a plot, sometimes the whole book. This happens to me at least once in a novel, sometimes more. Somebody pops up and says, “Here I am. I’m saying this and doing that, deal with it already.” Then I, the author, get up, stomp around the room, curse, hopefully colorfully, and realize that often the character is a great gift. A gift that requires the writer, me, to do some more work, sigh. But usually the new character has something to say/do/change that improves the book.

Here’s one of my favorite characters that popped up and took over, darn and bless her, and a recipe from her restaurant, Mama Chin’s Save On CafĂ©. For more of Mama Chin, read Starke Naked Dead, my mystery novel out April 28th!

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Confessions From a Collie Hero


I couldn't be more thrilled to introduce today's guest blogger, my favorite Collie, Dakota. Take it away.

Confessions From a Collie Hero.


Folks, I’ll have to make this fast because Emily, you know her, Special Agent Emily Dahill, is due back soon and she hates it when I use the computer. Heck, she thinks I’m talking with my girlfriends in Scotland. Yeah, well she could be right. Okay, so maybe once or twice, a day. But she’s on it all the time talking to her fiancĂ©e, Jarrod. I ask you, is that fair or what.

Anyway, what I’d love to know is the why? Why is this series named after her. I mean really, Emily Dahill, CID Series. Talk about anemic. It’s got no oomph, no pizazz. The name just sits there like a steaming pile of poop on a cold day.

Saturday, April 14, 2012

Bonded by Crimson




I am delighted to be here today as your guest blogger, Bri. My debut novel “Bonded by Crimson” has been released on January 28th, and it is available in all formats at Black Opal Books, Amazon, Smashwords, Barnes & Noble and All Romance eBooks




My heroine Kate Rokov, discovers her “destiny” when her fortune reading friend attempts to “read” it from the cup, I chose to blog about coffee reading, a favourite pass time activity in Croatia and as you read along, you’ll learn it is popular in many countries. In my research on the topic I have learned this has a name. According to Wikipedia it’s called:
Tasseography (also known as tasseomancy or tassology) is a divination or fortune-telling method that interprets patterns in tea leaves, coffee grounds, or wine sediments.
The first inklings of tasseography can be traced to medieval European fortune tellers who developed their readings from splatters of wax, lead, and other molten substances. This evolved into tea-leaf reading in the seventeenth century, a short time after Dutch merchants introduced tea to Europe via trade routes to China.
Scotland, Ireland, and England have produced a number of practitioners and authors on the subject, and English potteries have crafted many elaborate tea cup sets specially designed and decorated to aid in fortune-telling. Cultures of the Middle East that practice divination in this fashion usually use left-over coffee grounds from Turkish coffee (see below) turned over onto a plate.

Friday, April 13, 2012

Friday the 13th and the "F" Word



FRIDAY THE 13TH AND THE “F” WORD

 “FRIGGATRISKAIDEKAPHOBIA”



Hi, Bri. Thank you so much for having me as your guest blogger today. My name is Debbie Christiana and I write paranormal romance and women’s fiction.  I’m excited to be here on such a fun day as Friday the 13th.  I was born on Friday, October 13th and often wondered if that contributed to my fascination and love of all things unexplained and mysterious.

Thursday, April 12, 2012

A Woman's Place


Hi Bri,
Thanks for inviting me to be a guest on your blog. I’m glad to be here.

A Woman’s Place

            Last week, BookStrand released my third mainstream western romance, A Woman’s Place and so my personal adventure continues. In other words, Yippee! I always dreamed of someday being a writer. Then I wanted to be a published writer and this is when I quote the clichĂ©, “You’re never given a dream without being given the power to make it come true.” You may have to work for it however.

A Woman’s Place follows my first historical for BookStrand, A Man’s World. In that book, a woman masqueraded as a gunfighter in 1887 Washington (state) Territory – actually, Trace was a pretty good gunfighter – everybody just thought she was a man except the hero who figured it out and helped save her from the outlaw who stalked her. When A Woman’s Place begins, Trace and Zeb have been married for just over six months. Then renegades rob the bank she owns in the town of Junction City.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

An Indie Voyage


An Indie Voyage
by Nancy Popovich


Thanks Bri, for the opportunity to write a guest post on your website.

After reading the great posts already present, I rethought what would be appropriate for my contribution, but found myself with writer's block. Writer's block?  This is a virtually unheard of phenomenon for me while writing, my mind is always churning with ideas to forward the story.
But this was different. Perhaps something witty and tongue in cheek, something wise or even something intellectual would do the trick. Alas, no sudden inspiration. So, I decided to follow the advice the ubiquitous they give to write what you know.

Tuesday, April 10, 2012

Most Romantic Line Ever


MOST ROMANTIC LINE EVER
Mona Karel

            I’m going to limit this to books.  Whenever I discuss most romantic lines in a movie, my friend Michelle brings up “Last of the Mohicans,” and “I will come for you.”  Yeah, that one’s pretty romantic but my mind always goes to “Yours, Mine, and Ours.”  The original one with Henry Fonda and Lucille Ball.  Yeah, long time ago, in a time when movies were about people more than position.  Henry Fonda was a mid level (non commissioned) officer, and Lucille Ball was the widow of the same.  No officers, no fancy houses, just amazing acting.  There is a marvelous piece of dialogue between Fonda and a teenage boy about the reality of romance being far more than a quickie in the back seat of a car.
            But this is about books.

Monday, April 9, 2012

First Chapters



First Chapters
By Roy Hayward

I like first chapters.  I have to confess that I have read many more first chapters than I have last chapters.  Many many more.  As an aspiring writer, I also write first chapters.  Again, I write many more first chapters than last chapters.  This is because I often end up re-writing first chapters after I get to the last chapter, and because I have started more stories than I have finished.

A first chapter is just like the opening line, it needs to capture the reader and make him or her want to read more, want to read the second chapter, and hopefully the last.

This is something to think about if you are writing.  Recently, I wrote a first chapter.  Here it is, please tell me if it makes you want to read more.

Saturday, April 7, 2012

Heaven and the Afterlife?


Jo Kinchington, Guest Blogger 7 April 2012

Title:  Heaven and the Afterlife?

Any of you ever watch Ghost hunters or Paranormal State or any of those other popular shows that explore whether or not we have contact with others AFTER we are dead? I know, I know, a lot of you, and myself most of the time, figure it’s all just made up.  I have to agree, on the shows, anyway, there is no clear way to tell whether or not what is happening is genuine....

I recently read a book titled “Encountering Heaven and the Afterlife” written by James Garlow and Keith Wall.  I got the book at first because it was a free Kindle download, but also, because I, like some of you, have often wondered about the Afterlife.  The book is a compilation of experiences of people with the afterlife, those who have had Near Death Experiences and those who feel they were contacted by a close friend or family member after they had passed away.  Garlow also points out that although the Bible seems to confirm the ability of spirits to interact with the living after death, it also cautions us never to SUMMON a spirit, which can be dangerous.

 Now, I am of the Christian faith and I fully believe there IS an afterlife, in heaven, but I have often thought about being able to be contacted by family after they have died.  That being said, I have had a couple of experiences myself that I think about often. 

The first experience was about 20 years ago.  My (then) husband who was in the Army, had gone ahead of us to his next post, I had stayed behind to let the kids finish school.  I was sleeping on a twin mattress in our living room floor, so I could hear the kids in their bedrooms if they needed me in the night. One night I woke up to someone, or something, pushing my face down into the mattress.  It was very frightening, and I began to panic.  A couple seconds later the pressure was released and I felt someone stroking my face and telling me everything would be okay…I saw no one, but I knew in my heart the voice was that of my Grandmother, who had passed away years before.    The second experience followed closely on the first, again, I awoke to hear my grandmother whispering my name in my ear and saying all would be well…I remember even feeling the warmth of her breath. 


So, right, sounds crazy?  Maybe it is.  Or maybe I just miss her so much I imagine it all…  I have had a few experiences since then, the most recent being last week.  I was in the office and one of my volunteers was standing with her back to the door and talking to me as I faced the door.  I saw someone come in behind her and at the same time I saw this person, my volunteer was turning around as she felt someone behind her.  She looked back and me and said, “Did you see that”…and I had…

I know that we can easily explain away all of these experiences as dream states or shared hallucinations, just as Near Death Experiences can be explained away by the by products of a dying brain…however, it has always been odd to me that all Near Death Experiences seem to be pretty much the same despite different cultural, language and religious backgrounds.
So, that’s my thought for today.   I’d like to hear from all of you, have you ever had any experiences such as mine?  What do you think about the whole issue of life after death? 

Wow thank you so much for sharing this amazing post. Those are some most interesting experiences. I believe in unusual phenomenom myself. In fact we lived in a house that was haunted then burned when I was a child. It was of evil so I believe it could have been a demon or something along those lines. 

 






Friday, April 6, 2012

Turing Back the Hands of Time...A Giveaway


Kay Dee Royal ~ Turning Back the Hands of Time?!!

Hello Bri, thank you so much for the opportunity to guest post on your awesome blog site. Lovely place to hang out!
Quick into of me, Kay Dee Royal: I love writing! *grins* Paranormal and fantasy erotica romance are a couple of my favorites, but I’ve penned contemporary erotica and plenty of shorties in those genre as well.
My muse is taken away by strong, intelligent, confident heroines and rescued by wild, rugged, beastly heroes, both of which harbor shadowy secrets of intrigue and fun. (My muse loves the escape ~ LOL)

Okay…on to bigger and better stuff ~ like…



Turning Back the Hands of Time?!!
Can you imagine the possibility of being a fifty-five-year-old widow who never bore children and lived with the ability to psychically read animals? Now, imagine that same woman’s image in a mirror reflected back at her as a thirty-year-old.
Sounds divine, doesn’t it…you might even be feeling a bit envious if you’re over thirty…(me, too).
She stares at herself…elastic skin, lean muscle, all traces of gray hair gone, turning this way and that, suddenly realizing, dang, I’m feeling pretty agile, too. She gained back her youth…how you ask?
Let’s just say a Lycan named Chance has everything to do with it. Oh, so sexy and freeing ~ and might burn your eyes and curl your toes if mentioned here…exactly how it happens that is. *grins*
I know you hate me now ~ but Bri rules the site (LOL), and it’s forbidden to burn eyes and curl toes on it…but, I can share a bit.
Here’s a bit about Olivia and Chance’s story ~ Staring Into the Eyes of Chance (a paranormal erotica romance and 1st book of the LIIA: Lycan International Investigation Agency series).

Thursday, April 5, 2012

RJ Terrell Fantasy and God Genes



Hello Darlings, Please welcome RJ Terrell who describes himself "As a writer of fiction and fantasy and an aspiring actor I enjoy the outdoors and all the adventure it brings." His guest post paints a most interesting world he has created in the fantasy genre. Do take a look. 


Hello Bri and thank you for having me on your blog!



I am primarily a writer of fantasy, but recently I have branched a bit to try my wings at different fiction. Currently I am awaiting the cover artwork for my third and final book Heroes Of A Broken Age, in the Legend of Takashaniel Trilogy. I wrote my first book, Echoes Of A Shattered Age, back in 2006, and it was a lengthy affair, taking a little over a year and a half to write. I had never written a book before, and though I greatly enjoyed the process, it was a rather tall order and took some time.
I had been reading for some years, and fantasy had always been my primary genre to enjoy, though I always have enjoyed different types of fiction. It was back around 2003, if memory serves, when the first spark entered my mind that I wanted to write. Several characters came to mind, and would not leave me alone. (before you readers call the mental hospital, every writer is constantly bombarded by various characters demanding to have their stories told. *wink*)
Once I had decided that I would indeed like to attempt to write the book, I knew from the start that there was one thing I wanted to do differently. Although things are slowly changing, the fantasy genre at large is primarily told from the Eurocentric perspective, with the occasional character type that is patterned after a different ethnicity here or there. I had seen for years that there was a need for something more diverse, and judging from the fans on the message boards of many bestselling fantasy authors, I was not the only one to notice this.
The one thing I was always taught as a child was to be the change, and if there is something I would like to see done, do it myself. I have nothing but love and admiration for the many fantasy authors out there, paving the way for writers like myself who are just beginning, and I realize and respect that the stories they tell are theirs, not mine. My expectations of the type of change I would like to see in fantasy are my own, and I celebrate that. I like to think that I approach fantasy in the same manner that the creator of Star Trek has approached that world. What I mean is, Gene Roddenberry created Star Trek as a rich and ethnically diverse world devoid of the racial issues we have today. This is how I approach fantasy. Although there are different ethnic groups, or representations of ethnic groups in my stories, the reader will enjoy this without the tiring (in my humble opinion) racial issues we deal with in our world.
The Legend of Takashaniel Trilogy is my first venture into such a world. It is based largely off of a future version of this world, after the death of the earth was mysteriously and inexplicably avoided. Technology suddenly began to die away until humanity was left to start over again in a world that had begun to rapidly evolve around them. Many believed it was the Gods who took technology away, but there were some few who knew the truth of it.
This trilogy follows the exploration of a group of human warriors who carry a God Gene that makes them stronger, faster, and in every way, superior warriors than any who had ever lived. But as always, there is a catch, and this Gene does have its limits.
In the first book, we walk alongside Kenyatta, an orphan from Jamaica who was adopted by a vacationing couple from the Philippines. The couple raised him alongside his best friend, Kita, and the two were raised as brothers, and trained side by side every day of their lives.
Akemi, a ninja demon hunter shares a close, yet sometimes comical relationship with her samurai brother, Kenjiro. The two siblings have looked out for each other their entire lives, and though Kenjiro feels his sister is somewhat reckless, deep down he knows that she is the most fearsome warrior he has ever known.
Shinobu is a Farstrider who carries with him a sword of unknown origin. It is hinted about in the first book, but is explored a bit more in the final book due out later this year. There will be a future book that more completely delves into the relationship between the strider and this weapon.
The second book is more of a linking book, that follows only part of the original cast. We once again follow the adventures of Kenyatta and Kita, but this time we delve deeply into a character who only played a small part in the first book; Seung Yoon from the village of Kyu, in Korea. This beautiful woman begins a journey that will answer many of the questions she’s had about herself and her unusual appearance. In Legends Of A Shattered Age, we are introduced to new aspects of the world, and peoples that humans unwittingly share the world with…and I don’t just mean the typical kind that come to mind when you think of fantasy. *grin*
The final book, Heroes Of A Broken Age, further introduces you to more of the world, and brings about the conclusion to the struggle against Brit, an alien being who grows more powerful by leeching energy from the earth. These warriors battle waves of demons, as small as a human, and as large a skyscraper. There is no want for action in these books, and I have had a blast walking alongside the characters.


After the writing of the first book, I immediately started on the second, but after reaching near the halfway point, a family loss left me deeply wounded and lost. That, coupled with living in a place I did not enjoy, I had been unable to write more than a paragraph for nearly five years. This is where we come to the question of whether or not a person can truly know if they are a writer. I believe I cannot articulate this better than best selling author R.A. Salvatore when he said, “if you can make a living doing anything else, do it. If you can’t imagine doing anything else; if you have stories that demand to be written, and it’s on your mind all the time, then that’s it. You’re a writer.”
No truer words have ever been spoken. Though I had not written for nearly five years, the story was always there, waiting patiently in the back of my mind for when I finally opened my computer once more. The characters, with the patience of truly balanced warriors, waited for the day I came out of my prolonged grief and stepped back on the path with them to continue their story. And in June of 2010, I opened the computer once more, and stepped back into Legends Of A Shattered Age, and have been traveling in that world ever since.
It is here, that I would like to note that I do not believe in writer’s block. There are times when we reach a snag, and the creative juices do not flow as freely. We may need to stand up and walk away for a while. We may need to take a break, whether for a few hours or a few days, but writer’s block, to me, is in your head. When my father passed away, I didn’t write for years. If I was on a deadline, I would not have been able to take such an extended leave. But I was a beginning writer back then. It was a craft that was somewhat between a serious hobby and a scary career path.

And a scary career path it can be for the beginning writer. You’ve written that first book. It’s your baby that you’ve been nurturing for the past year or two, proofreading and re-writing and perfecting until you were ready to pull your hair out. Then, the prospect of submitting it to have it potentially torn apart by some stranger? It is a daunting thought. One thing I tell people when they ask me about this is, “what do you find more frightening? Do you find it more frightening working the job you do right now for the rest of your life, or potentially having your first manuscript read and constructively critiqued by a professional? At the end of the day, it is our precious ego that shrinks away from this challenge. We are afraid that our hard work and best effort isn’t good enough. Then what?
Then we work harder. When I was in the seventh grade, my best effort to climb the pole was about a foot off the ground. By the end of the seventh grade, my best effort was up and down the pole faster than anyone in my class. Is there a difference? Nope. It’s about putting in your best effort and improving, so that your best is better than your best was yesterday, last week, last year.
You want to be a writer, actor, basketball player, whatever. More than likely, your first best effort won’t make the cut, but with a good work ethic, some talent, a large amount of effort, and a small (better yet, nonexistent) ego, your best can and will be good enough. Fear is a barrier that tests us. Once you do what you fear, that fear will quickly disappear. Again, would you rather continue doing what you do now, or become that which you dream to be?
I cannot stress this enough that to be a success at whatever you choose to do in life, it will take a lot of work and discipline. Remember that we are asking people to pay us for the service we provide. There is nothing wrong with this as long as we give our customer (in this case, the reader) our very best and most professional effort possible. Always.
Will everyone always like everything that you write? Of course not. But as long as you put forth your very best effort at what you do, there will be many who will enjoy and resonate with your work. And that is a very satisfying and humbling thing.






Tuesday, April 3, 2012

3 Ways to Gain Influence Online (That You Probably Haven’t Thought Of)


3 Ways to Gain Influence Online (That You Probably Haven’t Thought Of)
guest post by K.C. Neal

1. Provide Original Information

It seems like everyone is a content provider these days. It’s just so easy to start a blog or throw up a website. But how much of the content out there is truly original and useful? My background is in science and research, so I love data and original research. (Let’s hear it for writers who love advanced statistics! Hello…?) Last year, I put out a book blogger survey, and over 70 bloggers responded. One of the most popular posts on my blog is based on some of the data from that survey: The One Thing Book Bloggers Hate Most. It’s also one of my most commented-on non-giveaway posts. For all I know, I’m the only person who’s ever conducted a survey specifically aimed at book bloggers! That survey gave me tons of original information to share. I’ve written several posts about working with book bloggers and doing blog tours, and I’ve taught a couple of webinars on these topics. Ya see? Originality… authority… influence. Find ways to provide useful, original content, and I guarantee readers will get excited about it and be interested in what you have to say.

Monday, April 2, 2012

What I wish I knew before I published that I know now

What I wish I knew before I published that I know now
By Joshua Graham


Prior to my contract with Howard Books (an imprint of Simon & Schuster), I had always believed that I could be in control of all aspects of my career. On the surface, one could argue that I did all the right things, worked my tail off, and applied my knowledge of the craft and business, and those all led to my getting published with one of the Big 6.
Indeed, without work nothing will happen, because books don’t get themselves published, nor do they sell themselves.