Showing posts with label One Year Blogger Celebration. Show all posts
Showing posts with label One Year Blogger Celebration. Show all posts

Sunday, April 21, 2013

Today I welcome D.A. Serra on the blog


In the Limelight with...

D.A. Serra    
PRIMAL



Welcome and thanks for being part of this blog. 
I thought it a good idea to catch up with you and see what you are up to since the last time I reviewed a book for you. I reviewed Deborah Serra's Book Primal in January of this year. 
HERE is the link.
I simply loved this book, raved about it to every one that gave me a moment to say something. From beginning to end this book was gripping, thought provoking and an exceptional read.
So when Deborah agreed to be part of this celebration I was livid with excitement. To me Primal is in the same category as Heinz Konsalik's books. Great story teller.

That is enough about me though.
Here is her answers to my questions.
Hope you enjoy as I did when preparing this post. 


      1.      Are you famous is the general question I get when family and friends introduces me to their friends. It always left me with a pause as quick comebacks filters through my mind but ending up saying something like ….”Oh gee thanks” and give a shy smile. Silly I know. I mean if I was you would not have asked it. 
           (a) Does this happen to you and 
           (b) What do you say?

Actually I don’t think I’ve been asked if I’m “famous”.  Although I have been asked once or twice for an autograph, which I find bizarre and embarrassing.  The two most often asked questions I get once I’ve been introduced as a writer are:  do I know anything you’ve written; and where do you get your ideas?  For the first question, I have to keep frustration out of my voice, as I’ve heard it so many times and it is such an absurdly phrased question because I have no idea what someone else has seen or read – so I smile and do the best I can.  For the second, I explain that many of my creative thoughts start with just a phrase or a particular character that enters my mind from, I suppose, my unconscious. 

2. In general do you like to talk about your writing and published books or are you very close-lip about it? If not, why?

I really hate talking about my writing and I have a tendency to stumble around mentally when I’m forced to.  I’ve spent so much time and effort working for the perfect illustrative phrase, and the perfect emotive moment, that I want it to be read – for the work to be experienced in the way intended.  Some books and stories don’t lend themselves well to the thirty seconds most people are willing to give you at a cocktail party.  My thriller, Primal, has always been slightly easier to talk about and I think that is because thriller readers are so in-tune with their genre that they are along for the ride as soon as you start talking.
    
        3.  What book/s are you currently writing and what is it about?

As mentioned, I hate summarizing, but I know I must get better at it, so, for this particular book I’ll speak conceptually:  I’ve just completed a novel (literary fiction – The Blurry Line) about the line between conscious and unconscious decision-making and how our new knowledge of brain function damages our beloved concept of Free Will.  I am very proud of this work.  It is currently being considered by editors at three different publishing houses and I’m hoping for the best.
Meanwhile, I am half-way through a humorous travelogue I’m writing with my sister.  It is about a trip we took together after our youngest left for college and we felt disoriented and sad so we took off for Ireland.  It was a funny and poignant trip and the book is called 2 Broads Abroad: Sisters Fly An Empty Nest – Out After Curfew and the Kids Don’t Know.

     4.   Why this particular genre?

I have always moved between genres.  First, I put Primal out into the marketplace.  Primal is a thriller with a mother and child at the core, then I finished The Blurry Line, and now I’m doing a humorous memoir – moving genres allows me to stretch into different worlds and voices.  For the twenty years that I wrote for TV & Film, I constantly shifted from one format and genre to another.

      5.      What inspire or motivate you to write?

I cannot remember a time when I was not writing so motivation has never been an issue.   If I get to a spot where I don’t feel particularly inspired I just go read some Charles Dickens.  Sometimes his genius spurs me onward, and sometimes it just makes me feel crappy about myself, but either way it always leads me back to the words.

6. What is the writing process like for you?

I start very early in the morning before the requirements of the day overwhelm me and I write for about five or six hours.

     7.   What is the best and/ or worst part of being a writer?

The worst part of being a writer is waiting for others to read.  The best part is that one sentence that has the perfect metaphor – that one flawless phrase.

      8.      Any advice for struggling writers?

Try to work on two projects at a time:  one that is the love of your life, and one just for the money.  Understand that it is a business as well as an art and approach it that way.  There is no crime in writing commercial material as long as you’re working on what matters most as well.  I always encourage writing students to have two projects going all the time.

      9.   What is your favorite genre to read or write?

I read so many different genres but I do love literary fiction where both the story and the language matter.




      10.   Favorite author?

I appreciate so many writers for different reasons: if I’m reading history I love Thomas Cahill and I’ve read his hinges of history series several times; for essays, to my mind, there is not a living or dead writer who can match David Foster Wallace in psychological insight, humor, vocabulary, or erudition; for fiction, I will always read Ann Patchett and Barbara Kingsolver.  All that said, if I were forced to choose one writer, just one, I would have to be Charles Dickens. Dickens is in a world of his own.  His fiction writing literally changed society, influenced child labor laws, helped to abolish debtor prisons, and gave a human face (however ugly) to both sides the French Revolution and Reign of Terror.  He makes me laugh and cry while composing some of the most beautiful and often recited passages in English literature.  Can anything more be expected of a writer?

      11.   Do you have a favorite spot to read and write?

I’m a cuddle up on the soft sofa girl.

      12.  What do you like to do when not writing? 

I have taken ballet my whole life, so I continue to take 3 classes a week.  I am also quite an intrepid traveler having been in 7 countries in the past two years.  Also, I have a very close and overly involved family – and yes, I love that.



      13.  Do you have a bucket list and would you share at least two things on it?

I would love to take a boat from the ancient site of Troy (located on the coast of northern Turkey) and follow the path of the Odyssey with a Homeric scholar onboard.  I know National Geographic did a trip like this once and I wish I could have gone but it was really expensive.  Still, I haven’t forgotten it.

      14.  What have you done so far on this list?

As a traveler I have:  trekked into the Congo and been touched by a wild baby Mountain gorilla in the Virungas; I have been helicopter skiing in New Zealand, dog-sledding along the Canadian border, seen the Kermode Spirit Bear in situ in British Columbia, traveled by myself to central China where I saw the terra cotta warriors, sat in the Church of the Split Blood in St. Petersburg, Russia, and I lived for a month in a 16th century Scottish castle.  This is the traveler who is always restless inside of me.



      15.  Most daring thing or experience you have done you would like to share?

I would count getting off the plane in Xi’an, China, with no language skills whatsoever, all alone, and just getting a cab to the hotel as my most daring moment.

      16.  This or that questions:
             ·         Coffee or Tea - coffee
             ·         Sweet or sour – sweet
             ·         Home make meal or takeouts – home made
             ·         Winter or summer –  winter
             ·         Night-owl or Early-Bird –  early
             ·         Telephone or visits – visits
             ·         Which social network do you prefer? none
             ·         Blogger or website? Website www.deborahserra.com
             ·         What does your family say about your career? Supportive or Clueless - Supportive

And Finally

Contact details:  www.deborahserra.com

Buy links of the newest books you would like the readers to know.
If you like thrillers please buy Primal



Our time is up and once again I want to thank D.A. Serra for being part of this blog. 

This was a good Interview and I loved the answers. Thanks Deborah for joining us today. You are an inspiration to the rest of us. Hope that the book will do well and that your other ventures will be fruitful.

Remember as always support the authors.

Next time on In The Limelight with....
April 24, 2013
Sylvia McDaniel




Thursday, April 18, 2013

In the Limelight with….. Rachel Brimble




Welcome Rachel to 'In the Limelight with... and thanks for being part of this blog.



As you know this is a celebration for my first year as a blogger and what a year it has been. When I started I had no idea what to do, what to write and start to search the social networks I were a member of to learn what I could say that would draw feet to my blog Aspired Writer.
Many authors were in need for a good reviewer and since I love books I offered my help, signing up with a Tour team and the rest is history. Over the year I had the privilege to receive and read good books and one was Rachel Brimble's Historical Romance. 
So here we are a year later with a lot of water under the bridge. When the time came to celebrate the blog's birthday Rachel was one of the first to respond and I am really happy to see her again. Life goes on and all of us had ups and downs so when the thought came to celebrate the blog I wanted to find out what she was doing in the year since the last time I reviewed Love's Debt.
This is what she replied to my questions.


  1. Are you famous is the general question I get when family and friends introduces me to their friends. It always left me with a pause as quick comebacks filters through my mind but ending up saying something like ….”Oh gee thanks” and give a shy smile. Silly I know. (a)Does this happen to you and (b) what do you say?

I’ve never been asked if I’m famous, but I do get asked if I earn a lot of money, lol! Clearly, the majority of people compare every novelist to J K Rowling or Nora Roberts – I often answer with, “Not a huge amount, but it’s growing!” This usually gives them pause for thought and then they are interested in what sort of books I write J

  1. In general do you like to talk about you writing and published books or are you very close-lip about it? If no why?

I’m getting better at this than I used to be – I think most writers are introverts and to talk about our achievements is extremely difficult. One of my New Year’s resolutions is to do some form of public speaking this year. I am petrified. My ‘baby step’ plan is to be part of a panel initially and then take it from there. Word of mouth is still the biggest selling tool in publishing and readers like to physically ‘see’ authors.

  1. What book/s are you currently writing and what is it about?

My current work in progress is what I hope will be book three in my ongoing Templeton Cove series with Harlequin Superromance. The proposal for this book and book four is currently with my editor and I’m hoping a lovely new contract will drop into my inbox any day now.

This book is the first mainstream romance in the series (the first two are romantic suspense) and the hero and heroine are brand new characters to the Cove. Sasha Robinson (heroine) is on a mission to get the local fairground back in her family after it was taken over by the local crime lord. Everything is going to plan and her goal is in reach…and then John Jordon, the crime lord’s only son and heir arrives (the hero), and Sasha’s plans are thrown into disarray.

Copyright © 2013 by Harlequin Enterprises Limited



  1. Why this particular genre?

I write mainstream romance, romantic suspense and Victorian romance – my latest release is “The Seduction of Emily” with eKensington. I love writing alternate contemporary and historical because it keeps the writing fresh for my readers and me.

  1. What inspire or motivate you to write?

I am lucky enough to be a stay at home mom and I work around the family – I don’t take this luxury for granted and treat my writing as a full-time job. This means I don’t wait for inspiration to strike, I just have to get on with it! During the week, I write from 8.30 to 3.30pm every day with a dog walk in between and then grab as much time as possible, (without my family noticing) during the weekend.



  1. What is the writing process like for you?

Hard! It never gets any easier but I love it J I start each book with either a setting or premise and then sit down and write character sketches for the hero and heroine, plus a villain if I have one. This usually raises the internal issues of each character. I then write a two to three page synopsis and dive straight in. I write the first draft from start to finish without looking back – the following drafts are for clearing up the mess!

  1. What is the best and/ or worst part of being a writer?

Best part is typing The End and then the cover art – I cannot get enough of that feeling of seeing your cover art for the first time J

Worst part is the ‘sagging middle’ – my books come in at around 85-90,000 words and every time I hit 40,000 words, everything seems to grind to a horrible halt. The only thing I can do is write through it and hope some of it is salvageable by the end.

  1. Any advice for struggling writers?

Keep writing! It’s the only way to finish anything and also learn how to do it better next time. There is a huge amount of fear attached to the dream of becoming a writer, but writing is a craft and it can be learned. I did!

  1. What is your favorite genre to read or write?

Romantic suspense for both – although I read anything and everything with the exception of paranormal/sci fi. My imagination doesn’t stretch that far…

  1. Favorite author?

Nora Roberts every time – especially love her romantic suspense and J D Robb In Death series.

  1. Do you have a favorite spot to read and write? Share a photo if you have

My conservatory – just love it when the sun is shining and I feel as though I’m in the garden even when it’s cold…which is a lot in the UK!



  1. What do you like to do when not writing? Share a photo

Read, knit and walk the English countryside with my family and beloved black Lab, Max J



  1. Do you have a bucket list and would you share at least two things on it?

To holiday in the Caribbean and take a trip to the States to meet my agent, writer friends and readers in person.

  1. What have you done so far on this list?
Secured an agent
Earned enough money to justify my writing
Booked a weekend away in Barcelona for hubby and me without the kids – we’re going in June to celebrate our 15th wedding anniversary

  1. Most daring thing or experience you have done you would like to share?
 Sent off a manuscript, lol! I don’t lead the most exciting life, but I’m happy J

  1. This or that questions:
  • Coffee or Tea - Coffee
  • Sweet or sour – Sweet
  • Home make meal or takeouts – Both!
  • Winter or summer – Summer
  • Night-owl or Early-Bird – Early Bird
  • Telephone or visits – Visits
  • Which social network do you prefer? Twitter
  • Blogger or website? Blogger
  • What does your family say about your career? Supportive or Clueless Ultra Supportive

And Finally
Moto/wisdom in life you live by. 
“Set it up the way you want it to be.” Iyanla Vanzant

Contact details and buy links of the newest books you would like the readers to know.

Finding Justice – book one in the Templeton Cove series with Harlequin Superromance

Old friends, new secrets 
Sergeant Cat Forrester lives by her own set of rules. When her childhood friend is murdered, Cat's world is thrown into chaos. Especially because Jay Garrett-a man from her past-is a suspect, and he needs her help to prove he's innocent. After all they once shared, how can she say no? 
The attraction flares between them, and getting involved with a suspect is a huge risk. But the more time Cat spends with Jay, the stronger the tug on her heart. He is the same caring, irresistible man she remembers. Yet she can't let her emotions interfere with the case—solving it is top priority. But as she digs deeper, she discovers Jay has secrets that may jeopardize any possible future together.


The Seduction of Emily – eKensington

Seduction is a wicked game, and no one plays it better than the devilish Will Samson in Rachel Brimble's captivating new novel. . .
Since girlhood, Emily Darson has accepted that she will marry Nicholas, the son of her father's trusted business partner. The marriage contract safeguards her family legacy, Emily's fortune, and everything she values--except her independence. Only when a sinfully handsome scoundrel enters her life does Emily realize quite how much a loveless match will cost her.
Will Samson has advanced from expert pickpocket to confidence trickster of the highest caliber. Now he has come to Bath to exact vengeance on the man who destroyed his mother--the man Emily will soon marry. But from his first glimpse of the enemy's bewitching, spirited fiancée, Will's plan changes.
Amid the ballrooms and salons of elegant society, heated glances explode into scandalous kisses. Revenge is sweet, but surrender will be irresistible. . .



Well our time is up, thank you for visiting and taking the time to know the authors. As always support them by buying their books and give them feedback. If you do not have something good to say keep it to yourself or mail the person. At the end we are sensitive creatures that takes every ugly critic to heart since it is a book born from our hearts. 
Thanks once again Rachel for your willingness to share with me and the readers.
I wish you all the best.

Next on In the Limelight with...
April 21, 2013
D.A Serra




Sunday, April 14, 2013

Today the Limelight is on Bronwen Evans


In the Limelight with….. Bronwen Evans



Welcome and thanks for being part of this blog and my one year celebration.

I thought it a good idea to catch up and see what you are up to since the last time I reviewed a book for you.

You can see my review for 
To Challenge Earl of Cravenswood 


Author’s Interview Questions

      1.       Are you famous is the general question I get when family and friends introduces me to their friends. It always left me with a pause as quick comebacks filters through my mind but ending up saying something like ….”Oh gee thanks” and give a shy smile. (a)Does this happen to you and (b) what do you say?

Hi Lynelle, thanks for having me to blog. I’m waving from New Zealand.

The answer to being famous is no way! I’m not famous at all. For starters my books aren’t published here. NZ is too small and the romance market is tiny. I do however, get a very interested reply when they ask what I do for a living. When I tell them I’m a romance author, they usually want to know all about it. What I write, who I’m published by and how many books  I’ve written. Then they get onto how much money can you make and how long does it take you to write a book.

      2.       In general do you like to talk about you writing and published books or are you very close-lip about it? If no why?

I still work in another job, mainly because I like keeping my hand in the corporate world. I’m the Executive Director of a surgical society, and I certainly don’t hide that I write romance novels. They don’t seem to mind. I’m proud of what I write and I never hide it.


      3.       What book/s are you currently writing and what is it about?


I’m writing the third book in my Regency romance ‘Invitation to’ series, INVITATION TO PASSION, plus a contemporary yet to be titled.

Invitation to Passion
Consummate rake, Richard Craven, has his heartbroken when the woman he loves is forced into an arranged marriage to a violent brute. To make matters worse, circumstances force him to marry Madeline Knight—a woman he views more like a sister-only for fate to play the cruelest of tricks. Shortly after his wedding his former lover is widowed, and Richard learns she could be pregnant with his child.

Madeline Knight thought she was doing the right thing when she saved Richard Craven from his lover's irate husband. Now her silly schoolgirl crush has left her married to a man who's in love with another woman. Consumed with guilt over trapping Richard, she tries her best to be the perfect wife and win his heart. Failure is not an option. For if she fails she loses everything, she loves him too much not to set him free…

While Richard and Madeline confront the reality of their marriage, Madeline’s life comes under threat. A family enemy is set on revenge. Will Richard learn the truth of his heart, and what is truly precious to him, before the unknown enemy destroys their world?

      4.      Why this particular genre?

I write Regency romances because I love the history of the period and also the inequality of the sexes makes the tropes, like marriage of convenience etc, more believable.

I then write contemporary because I can turn to more modern themes and deal with issues that face women today.

      5.       What inspire or motivate you to write?

I love stories. I love thinking up stories and I love writing them down. It’s as simple as that. What a great way to make a living, doing something you’re passionate about.

      6.       What is the writing process like for you?

I usually plot out a story, then write an outline. Then basically write the book. I write whenever I can and set myself weekly targets.

      7.       What is the best and/ or worst part of being a writer?

Best part is I’m doing what I love. Worst part is that it never turns off. I can write all the time and get so lost in my stories I forget there is a world out there.

      8.       Any advice for struggling writers?

Just keep writing and learning your craft. Learn how to craft a good story. Take your favorite books and analyze them. Work our why you love them and understand what the author did. Then just simply write a good story. And keep writing them.

      9.       What is your favorite genre to read or write?

Regency, Contemporary and Paranormals
.
      10.   Favorite author?

I don’t have one favorite, I have many. Gaelen Foley, Nicole Jordan, Emma Wildes, Jennifer Ashley, Kresley Cole, Nalini Singh etc



      11.   Do you have a favorite spot to read and write? 

Yes, my vineyard beach house in the Hawke’s Bay area of New Zealand. It’s a little slice of heaven.



      12.   What do you like to do when not writing?

I usually spend time with friends and family and play the odd round of golf, and I enjoy playing bridge.

      13.   Do you have a bucket list and would you share at least two things on it?

Nope, I’m pretty content. I spent about 8 years living overseas and I travelled a lot. Most corners of the world, but there is no place like home. Mostly, I just want to stay healthy and happy. Perhaps my bucket list now relates to writing. I want to hit the NY Times top 50.

      14.   What have you done so far on this list?

Been on the NY Times Best Sellers List.

      15.   Most daring thing or experience you have done you would like to share?

Daring? I’d say giving up a highly paid job to be a writer is very daring. It paid off. I sold my first completed manuscript within 6 months of going down to part-time work.

      16.   This or that questions:
             ·         Coffee or Tea - TEA
             ·         Sweet or sour – SWEET
             ·         Home make meal or takeouts –  BOTH
             ·         Winter or summer – SUMMER
             ·         Night-owl or Early-Bird – EARLY-BIRD
             ·         Telephone or visits – VISITS
             ·         Which social network do you prefer? Facebook and Twitter
             ·         Blogger or website? BOTH – my blog is on my website. I usually only blog when I have something to say.
             ·         What does your family say about your career? Supportive or Clueless - SUPPORTIVE

And Finally

Moto / wisdom in life you live by. 
"You’ll never know unless you try"


Contact details and buy links of the newest books 

The Reluctant Wife – Bronwen Evans
Wicked Wagers – Bronwen Evans





Well that is it for today. 
Thanks Bronwen for visiting and sharing some of your wisdom and new releases with us.
Congratulations on your new books, may you see the fruit of all your hard work.

Remember please support our authors buying their books, giving them good reviews and going to your local library offering them a copy.


Next week In the Limelight with...
M.C.V. Egan
on April 17, 2013




Wednesday, April 10, 2013

In the Limelight with…..Ann B Harrison


In the Limelight with…..Ann B Harrison




Welcome and thanks for being part of this blog celebration.

I thoroughly enjoyed your book Taming the Outback. 
Sweet contemporary romance.
My review can be seen HERE

You're welcome Lynelle, thanks for having me back.

I thought it a good idea to catch up and see what you are up to since the last time I reviewed a book for you.


       1.       Are you famous is the general question I get when family and friends introduces me to their friends. It always left me with a pause as quick comebacks filters through my mind but ending up saying something like ….”Oh gee thanks” and give a shy smile. (a)Does this happen to you and (b) what do you say?

Yes it does, I usually get 'oh you're so and so's famous friend.

      2.       In general do you like to talk about your writing and published books or are you very close-lip about it? If no why?

I've never been the type of person to race out and get in someone's face if you know what I mean. I'm not good at self promotion. If they want to know about what I write I tell them. I even hand out cards so they can follow up and buy my books. I'm not too sure who gets the biggest buzz, me or them.

      3.       What book/s are you currently writing and what is it about? At the moment I have a couple of books on the go. My latest contemporary romance 'Outback Gold' is top of the list. Another book set in my favorite desert home. Outback Thunder was released last week.

Blurb
Zoe left home at the age of twenty when she found Jonas, the love of her life, in the arms of another woman. Ten years later she returns from London to help her brother keep their outback property in the family and out of the hands of the major shareholder - Jonas.
But they each hold a secret. Jonas has called her back under false pretences and Zoe's secret has the potential to destroy their love for ever.
Will their love survive?

      4.       Why this particular genre?

I was always told to write what you know. I'm a country girl, always have been so that's what I write.

      5.       What inspire or motivate you to write?

It can be something as simple as hearing a song or seeing a lovely landscape.

      6.       What is the writing process like for you?

Usually the first part of the book goes really fast and I can then see where I'm heading. The part I have the most trouble with is the middle of the book. Those are the days that I drag the words out and you have to keep going. It usually works out in the end.

      7.       What is the best and/ or worst part of being a writer?

The best part for me is research. Love going out and seeing what I can use in my books. As we speak I'm on my way to Sydney to see the Greek exhibit for research into a paranormal series I'm writing.

      8.       Any advice for struggling writers?

Yes, don't give up, EVER. Unless you don't really want to be a writer that is. Then feel free to play at it and brush it aside. But seriously, it's not easy. Like any job you have to work at it.

      9.       What is your favorite genre to read or write?

I love paranormal, young adult or adult.

      10.   Favorite author?

Way too many to say but I love when I find a new one to add to my list. Last year was Deborah Harkness.

      11.   Do you have a favorite spot to read and write?

I write everywhere, even the car when we travel.
    
      12.   Do you have a bucket list and would you share at least two things on it?

I don't have one really, I just go with the flow. There are some things I want to do and I will get around to it. Balloon flight and going to Italy are a couple of things I want next year.



      13.   What have you done so far on this list?

A lot of travel, getting my first book published, going to the States, doing the trip down the San Francisco coast.



      14.   Most daring thing or experience you have done you would like to share?

I'm a woose, I don't do anything out there.

      15.   This or that questions:
             ·         Coffee or Tea - Tea
             ·         Sweet or sour – Savory
             ·         Home make meal or takeouts – Home made
             ·         Winter or summer – Summer
             ·         Night-owl or Early-Bird – Early bird
             ·         Telephone or visits – Telephone, we live in the middle of the desert and everywhere is way too far to travel

             ·         Which social network do you prefer? Facebook :
         
             ·         Blogger or website? Website www.annbharrison.com

             ·         What does your family say about your career? Supportive or Clueless 
                    Really supportive, my DH is so proud of me.

And Finally

Moto/wisdom in life you live by.

You can fix a bad page but you can't fix a blank page.

Contact details and buy links of Ann's newest books are:
Outback Thunder :  Amazon / Red Hot : 


Well our time is up and I enjoyed visiting with Ann today. This is the part of writing I like the most, getting to know authors and what is important to them.
Thanks once again for your willingness to share with me and the readers. Congratulations with the book Outback Thunder I really hope that it will go well with this new addition out of your pen. As well as all your other ventures you are planning. 

Please remember to support all the authors that you read or seen about. They put a lot of effort into every book and the support is always a good sign that they are appreciated.

Thank you for having me Lynelle.

Next on In the limelight with....
We have Bronwyn Evans
on April 14, 2013


Until we meet again.