Showing posts with label Young adults. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Young adults. Show all posts

Sunday, January 11, 2015

New Book Release: Starcrossed by Suzanne Carroll.


GENRE: Young Adult Romance
PUBLISHER: WDA Publishing
COVER DESIGN: Manuela Cardiga


BLURB


Fish and chips on the pier.  Art.  Music.  Moonlit walks along the beach.  For the busker and the art student it’s the perfect summer romance. Until it ends suddenly with a savage thunderstorm.

A heartbroken Georgia thinks she’ll never see Tom again.  But Tom doesn’t give up easily and months later they find each other in the most unexpected place…

In the days before search engines and social networks, what lengths would you go to, to find the love you lost?



AUTHOR BIO

Suzanne lives in Sydney with her husband and children.  By day she works in an office where she quietly scribbles story ideas on yellow sticky notes and hopes they don’t accidentally end up on the departmental monthly report.  After hours she enjoys time with her family, and tries to turn those sticky notes into something readable.

CONTACT LINKS:  

To add to your TBR List 
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EXCERPT


It was one of those days.
The traffic was impossible and the weather miserable, all grey skies and a drizzle that reflected Georgia’s mood. The afternoon’s meeting had gone on way too long; the clients wanted to change the floor plan again, she’d have to re-do all the drawings, completely re-work the kitchen, and the Project Manager had brought the deadline forward a week.  But right now Georgia didn’t want to think about all that.  All she wanted was to get home, and find a few minutes to have a glass of wine, and put on some music.  Mozart, she thought, would be nice.
            The endless line of red tail lights gradually broke up and the roads cleared as she finally made her way out of the city, and deep into the suburbs of London.  The train would have been so much quicker. Some days, having a designated parking space at the office didn’t seem worth it.  But a little while later, Georgia smiled and her body began to relax as she pulled into her driveway and switched off the engine.  Leaning back against the headrest, she took a moment, breathing and deep. She let her mind wander, taking her away from meeting rooms and peak hour gridlock, down a different path.  Her thoughts led her back to the art exhibition she’d snuck out to see during yesterday’s stolen lunch break and she smiled as she revisited that precious half hour of luminous colour and subtle shadows in the small gallery next to the wine bar.  And that took her to thoughts of her old easel, tucked away in the attic, collecting dust.  It had been so long since she’d painted anything except her fingernails...
Georgia stared down at her perfectly manicured hands and remembered when they used to wear smudges of oils and inks.  Back in the days when her auburn hair was long, and her skirts were short.  Now it was the other way round.  Though her sapphire eyes still held the fire they had always had.
“Mum!”
Georgia’s thoughts scattered, and she looked up quickly. The front door was open and Sophie stood on the top step with her panic face on, twisting her dark curls with one hand, laptop clutched to her chest with the other.  “Mum, help! I need you!”
Georgia sighed and climbed out of the car, bracing herself for whatever new drama had befallen her teenage daughter.
“What’s up, sweetheart?”  She kissed Sophie’s forehead before hanging up her coat and dropping her bag onto the hall stand.  “Something happen at school?” 
“You were alive before the internet, right?”
Georgia bit back a smile.  “It wasn’t that long ago, Soph.”  Although, Georgia knew that, at forty-three, she probably seemed almost elderly to her seventeen-year-old daughter.  “Why?  What’s happ…”
“You’re not going to believe what my English teacher, Mr Gormsby, has done,” Sophie interrupted, then paused, taking a deep breath before announcing, “He’s set us an assignment and we’re not allowed to use or refer to the internet or social media, at all.  In any capacity.  Apparently, according to him, my generation is too dependent on search engines and social networking, can you believe it?”
Actually, Georgia could believe it.  Sophie’s head was almost permanently bent over her phone or laptop and it was the same with her brothers, Alec and Max. Though this afternoon it sounded like the fifteen-year-old twins had their video games fired up; the faint sounds of a zombie apocalypse floated down from upstairs. But Georgia kept her traitorous opinion to herself and hid another smile before calling out hello to her sons and asking if they’d had a good day.  They called hello back, and yes they had.  Then Georgia suggested she and Sophie go to the kitchen for a cup of tea and a chat.  Mozart and wine would have to wait. 
While Georgia filled the kettle and got out the mugs and teabags, Sophie pulled up a stool and set her laptop and her phone on the counter, glaring at them like they’d offended her somehow. “You know,” Georgia said,  “Your father and I survived school and university without the internet.  It’s not that hard.”
“Oh!  I nearly forgot.”  Sophie looked up suddenly and glanced at the phone on the wall.  “Dad called a while ago.  He’s going to be late tonight, but he’ll pick up a curry for dinner on the way.”
Georgia paused at the fridge, milk carton in her hand, and wondered why her husband had rung the home number, and not her mobile like he usually would.  “Did he say why he’ll be late?”
“Something about…I can’t remember. Picking something up?”
“Something apart from the curry?”
 “I think so.  I don’t know.  Maybe.”
“Sophie…” Georgia shook her head as she moved to the counter and splashed a small amount of milk into each cup.  “How hard is it to take down a simple message?”
“It’s not my fault he was so vague.  If it was important he would have texted.”
 Georgia rolled her eyes.  That was the way with Sophie; if it wasn’t in a text, it wasn’t worth remembering.  Mr Gormsby definitely had a point.  “What’s the assignment about?” Georgia asked.  Her question was answered with another dramatic sigh.
“Short essay on popular culture in modern fiction.”
“Without using the internet for research?  That shouldn’t be too diffi…”
Sophie held her hand up sharply.  “Wait, that’s not all.  We also have to write a short story about searching for something and it has to be set before 1995, so the characters can’t turn to the internet for help. No Google, no Facebook, no Twitter.”
“Searching without search engines, huh?  Actually, that sounds like fun.  And you like writing, you’re good at it.”
Sophie groaned and rubbed her hands over her face.  “I know but this is…ugh.  Jenn’s doing a detective piece.  Rex is writing about someone looking for their birth parents and I have no clue what to do.”
Georgia chuckled as she passed Sophie a steaming cup and stirred some sugar into her own.  “And I suppose that’s where I come in?”
Sophie gave her a hopeful smile.  “Yes, please,” she said eagerly.  “Tell me what it was like before the internet. Did you ever have to search for something?  Or someone?”
Someone.
Georgia stopped stirring.  Goosebumps prickled her skin as memories began to stir, taking her back over twenty years, to a boy on a beach. She wondered how different things might have been, if they’d had smart phones and Facebook back then.
“Actually, I did try to find someone, once,” she said quietly, staring down at her tea. Even now, her heart fluttered as she remembered.  “But my search started with a necklace.  And a TV talent show.”
            Sophie’s eyes widened, and she leaned forward. “Oh my God, really?  Who were you searching for?”
            “A boy.”  Georgia hesitated a little.  “He…he was called TJ.”
            “TJ.”  Sophie tried out the name.  “Who was he?  What necklace?  What show?”
            “It’s a long story.  And you’d have to turn your phone off while I tell you.”
            Sophie’s face reflected a brief internal struggle, but she did as her mother asked.  “Okay, phone’s off, and I’m listening,” she said.  “When was this?”
            “In 1991.  It started on a Sunday night, when I was supposed to be studying...”
 







  


  

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Saturday, December 27, 2014

Books I plan to read in 2015! Now just to find the time.

Some I have won, some I have bought and some are waiting for reviews. Quite impressive I may add.

So, in no particular order, here they are.

It isn't all of them but it will give you a good indication what I will be reading between all the other things I plan to do.

 

 

 

New challenges in 2015:

Social Network Marketer for WDA Publishing: This is a new venture for me and I am very excited about it. It will open many more doors and will learn even more with every step.

Publishing 2 more books: Liberated: A love story & Blood Mines - the story I wrote for NaNoWriMo.

Write the series surrounding A Pirate's Wife. More about this later. But definitely looking forward to this project.

And of course having fun!!!

I am looking forward to the year. It will have it's own challenges but I will take it day by day - or book by book. :)

I wish all my readers a prosperous 2015. 

Thanks for all your support in 2014.

Happy reading!

 

Wednesday, October 2, 2013

Wendy Siefken and Charles Siefken are visiting today.


Today I bring you two authors that works together that I have met on Master Koda on Facebook. A mother and son team that writes Young Adult stories. So far they have received good reviews on their books and I am glad to have them here today. Talented and full of life they love the path they are on.
I want to wish them the very best on this journey.


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, silly I know but the idea unsettles me. (a)Does this happen to you and (b) what do you say?

To answer a, no we don’t get that question yet. J What would we say though? Probably that we are just plain old everyday people who just happen to write books!

      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?

We love talking about our books, it really seems to be a great conversation starter as well as a way to spread the word. We don’t give the story line away we only want to get them curious about our book enough to read it.

      3.       What book/s are you currently writing and what is it about? 
      
      We just finished book 2 of Kai’s Journey and have started book three as well as The Chimera Effect and Fallen Angel. We like to bounce around a bit and give ourselves a break from one story to work on another once in a while.



"Kai's Journey" is a story about a young man, set ten years in the future. Kai has spent those years fighting for survival and trying to find a way rid the world of the disease his father created... His father was a military scientist charged with the task of perfecting a formula that would create a superior breed of soldiers. Kai's father accidentally created a race of zombies.  Like a virus, it soon spreads to the entire world, unleashing a period of unsurpassed chaos and conflict.
     In the midst of this turmoil, Kai comes across a young woman named Clover, who is part of a clan traveling across the United States to try to find what is left of humanity. Clover is a part of a clan of werewolves who can turn at will but aren't blood thirsty savages as depicted in general history. . 
     Along the way Kai and Clover come across stragglers who join with the group as they journey across the upper part of what used to be known as North America.
      One night while Kai and Clover were watching a meteor shower they meet a group totally out of this world. Kai and Clover begin a heroic journey, fueled by the increasingly dim hope that somehow, the human race will have a chance to start over.

      4.       Why this particular genre? 
       We love to write in Young Adult genre because mainly it’s a genre we are passionate about and love to see the stories come to life.



.         5.  What inspire or motivate you to write? 

      Everyday life inspires us to write. Anything from a movie, video game, character in a book can and often does inspire us.

      6.       What is the writing process like for you? 

      Charlie is the creator and we work together to flesh out the story and watch it come to life.

      7.       How did/do you teach yourself to write? 

     We are learning the old school way, the school of hard knocks. Neither of us have an education in literature but we both love stories we both knew we needed help with our writings. We found and editor who has been a real blessing and helped us to learn so much more then we could have ever learned on our own.

      8.       What aspect of the craft do you think is most difficult to learn? 

      The editing phase of it. We try really hard to keep our voice in the story and yet please the editor by producing a quality book.

      9.       What has been the most encouraging comment someone has made about your writing? 

      Any good review we get is always encouraging. Friends on Facebook who have encouraged us to keep learning and keep growing. Family members who have stood beside us through thick and thin.

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

      The best part is all of it, the people that we get to meet and the ideas we always seem to come up with. The worst part can sometimes be when someone gives you that look like, “If you are a writer, why haven’t I heard of you?”

      11.   Any advice for struggling writers? Keep learning, keep improving and never ever give up.

      12.   What is your favorite genre to read or write? We both love YA, and pretty any fantasy that lands in our hands.

      13.   Favorite author? For Charlie it is Christopher Paolini and for me it is Terry Brooks
       


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

     Charlie likes to write pretty much where ever an idea strikes him. I like to write in our recliner that we have in front of the computer.

      15.   What did you do before you became a writer? Charlie was still in school and I was a mom who worked many different jobs outside the home.

      16.   Was it a life long dream or triggered recently?

      I have always loved to tell stories and Charlie has always liked listening to me tell stories about him and his brother and sister fighting dragons and ogres and any other evil forces out there.

      17.   What do you like to do when not writing? 
      
      I like to visit with friends, garden and sit by a camp fire. Charlie likes to spend time with his girlfriend, his friends and online gaming.
      
      
      18.   Do you have a bucket/ to-do list and would you share at least two things on it? For Charlie and I both we would like to take a trip up across Canada and take the route that Kai took in our book. We would both also like to take the family to Hawaii and spend 2 weeks there.
       

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

      Most daring thing I have done was snorkeling in Hawaii and for Charlie he has enrolled in College. He never liked school and always swore he would never go back. He is really enjoying it.
  
     20.   This or that questions:
            ·         Coffee or Tea –Me, tea, Charlie, water
            ·         Sweet or savory – both, savory
            ·         Home make meal or takeouts –  Home make meal for both of us
            ·         Winter or summer – we both like winter
            ·         Night-owl or Early-Bird –  I am an early bird, Charlie is a night owl
            ·         Telephone or visits –  visits
            ·         Which social network do you prefer? Me I prefer Facebook, Charlie prefers online gaming.
            ·         Blogger or website? Blogger for me, Charlie doesn’t do either.
            ·         What does your family say about your career? Supportive or Clueless Our whole family is very supportive of our career. They love that we are taking a chance on our dreams of becoming a writer.


And Finally

Moto/wisdom in life you live by. 

We definitely live by the simple rule of Never Give Up.

Buy Links for the Books on Amazon

Contact details for the authors.
http://www.pinterest.com/wendyandcharles/boards/
http://www.amazon.com/Wendy-Siefken/e/B0069CYGBW/ref=ntt_athr_dp_pel_2


Thanks once again for your willingness to share with me and the readers.


Monday, September 23, 2013

Interview with Douglas Davis author of Dreams Adrift


It is my great pleasure to welcome Douglas to my blog. 
We are both members at Master Koda on Face book.
A group where support is of the utmost importance and a group that really do just that, SUPPORT.
In this business you need all that and more, a great group under the leadership of Kim Mutch Emerson.
It is a great honor to have him here.


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 but the idea unsettles me.
(a)Does this happen to you and (b) what do you say?

This does happen to me now-and-then when folks find out I’ve written a few books. I usually smile and tell them I’m locally famous depending on where you’re standing.

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 do enjoy talking about my writing and the books I’ve published. I find that most people seem genuinely interested in hearing about what it was like to write and publish a book. Often, the story of how I came to write my first book fascinates them more than the actual story in the book.

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

I currently have three projects underway at the same time. The first is another young adult novel titled: A BOY, A BEACH, AND A COFFEE BEAN. The manuscript is complete and I am currently seeking representation for this title. No cover yet, I’m afraid, but I can tell you a little about the story.
The novel opens on the first day of summer vacation on Buzby Island. Instead of sleeping late and spending the rest of the day on the beach, Jacques O’Larrity (yes, his mother knew how that would sound) is up at the crack of dawn to go to work in his mother’s coffee shop, The Parisian Bean. A single-mom since Jacques’s father walked out when the boy was three, Marie has decided that at fifteen Jacques is old enough to start taking some real responsibility in the family business. Opening the store for the early morning bakery delivery and getting the coffee brewing for the first customers of the day fits that bill quite nicely.
Jacques’s fifteenth summer will bring many firsts for the boy: first kiss, first love, first heartbreak, first time he’s seen his father in twelve years, and his first serious girlfriend. Events will challenge his image of himself, how he sees others, and force him to make decisions that could affect the rest of his life. All this against a background of sun, sand, salt air, and the aroma of baking cakes and fresh brewed coffee.

I’m also working on drafts for a follow-up series to my RIVER DREAM books. The new series picks up with the same family a generation later.

The third project is a departure from the young adult genre as it addresses how a man in his fifties adjusts to the sudden loss of his wife just as they reach the empty nest stage.

4. Why this particular genre?

I chose to write for young adults so my students - I teach middle school - could read my books.



5. What inspired or motivated you to write?

I have enjoyed writing since I was in junior high and a fabulous English teacher by the name of {fill in name of 8th grade English teacher here} encouraged me to write, write, write. More recently, I was inspired to write the River Dream series after attending an adult sailing camp at the camp my sons had attended for many summers and where I finally learned how to sail. That experience set the stage for the River Dream books and the camp actually features prominently in the story.

6. What is the writing process like for you?

I get an idea and I may write it down or sometimes I mull it over in my mind for a while. If the idea sticks around, I’ll sit down at the computer and start typing the story line down. If the story seems to be working, I’ll start to flesh it out with dialog and begin creating backstories for my characters. When it’s all really flowing, I’ll lose my sense of time and place and become immersed in the story as I write it.

7. How did/do you teach yourself to write?

I think the most important thing I did to teach myself to write was to be a voracious reader. I believe my writing style has been influenced by a host of my favorite authors.

8. What aspect of the craft do you think is most difficult to learn?

The most difficult aspect of the craft of writing for me has been learning what to leave out, whether it be words, scenes, or whole chapters. Sometimes a paragraph that I just loved writing doesn’t, in the end, move the story along and has to be cut.

9. What has been the most encouraging comment someone has made about your writing?

There have been so many, but one stands out in my mind. A reader who was also a mother of teenage daughters told me the two things she liked best about my books were, one – she truly enjoyed the writing and getting to know the characters and, two – she knew she could leave the book on the table and not worry if her daughters picked it up and started reading it as the stories were equally appropriate for them as for her.

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

The best part of being a writer is giving life to my characters. Around my house, my characters become part of the household to the point where we speak of them as if they were real people we know.
The worst part of being a writer, I guess, is that the little editor inside my head is always working even when I’m reading other writers’ work and I notice little things most readers probably overlook.

11. Any advice for struggling writers?

I know it’s cliché, but clichés are around for a reason – Write! Write! Write! And find someone who will give you an honest, constructive critique of what you write. But most important, WRITE!

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

My favorite genre has changed over the years but the two I have read most consistently are Science Fiction and Military Adventure.

13. Favorite author?

Based on the sheer number of his books I’ve read, I would have to name W.E.B. Griffin as my favorite author. Isaac Asimov would give Mr. Griffin a run for his money with me though.



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

My favorite spot to read would be on the beach somewhere along the North Carolina coast, most often Kure Beach.
My favorite place to write is at a corner table of a coffee shop, aware of the hubbub around me yet apart from it, lost in the story I’m creating.

15. What did you do before you became a writer?

Counting from when I began work on the story that became my first book, RIVER DREAM, I was an accountant turned middle school teacher before I became a writer and my day job is still teaching.

16. Was it a life long dream or triggered recently?

Writing is something I’ve dreamed of doing since junior high school. In all the years between then and writing RIVER DREAM I’ve filled notebooks and boxes with poems, short-stories, essays, and the beginnings of novels. But writing was always something to be done in the background of getting on with real life.
Attending the Adult Sailing Camp and learning to sail inspired me to write the RIVER DREAM series.



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

When I’m not writing I like to spend time with my wife and sons to the beach, going fishing, going camping, or sailing.

18. Do you have a bucket/ to-do list and would you share at least two things on it?

Two of the main things on my bucket list have recently been accomplished, learning to sail and publishing a book. One of the other things, becoming a grandfather, is outside of my control. (Boys, are you paying attention?) I would also like to learn to SCUBA Dive someday soon.



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

One of the most daring experiences I would like to share happened the winter after I got out of the Army. I was living in New England at the time and went to work at a ski area managing night snowmaking operations. Night-after-night my crew and I went out onto the mountain in the cold to operate the equipment to make man-made snow so there would be enough cover on the mountain for the skiers to ski. That winter there was almost no snow before Christmas and the resort was able to open for the holiday because of the work of my crew. The job itself was a daring adventure every night.

20. This or that questions:

Drinks Coffee, Sweet tooth, Like Homemade meals, Favorite season is Summer, Early-Bird, Like to Visit.

Which social network do you prefer? Facebook, it’s where all my friends are.
Blogger or website? 
My website is www.riversailorliterary.com and there is a sort of blog on there where I occasionally post excerpts from stories I’m working on.

What does your family say about your career? 

My family has been very supportive of my writing. My wife has taken on the role of proof-reader and pre-editor. My sons are both beta readers and aren’t afraid to tell me which characters they like and don’t like and why.



And Finally Moto/wisdom in life you live by.

Great words of wisdom, hmm. Remember that most of the people you meet in life are doing the best they can. Give them the benefit of the doubt. Freely offer courtesy and kindness. It costs you nothing and might just make someone’s day a little better.

Contact details and buy links of the newest books you would like the readers to know.
Readers can find me on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/RiverSailorLiterary, on Twitter at https://twitter.com/DWDavisRSL and can visit my website at http://www.riversailorliterary.com/.


My latest book, DREAMS ADRIFT, the third in the RIVER DREAM series, 
is available on Amazon 


Synopsis:

DREAMS ADRIFT is the much anticipated third book of the River Dream series. It begins immediately after the end of DREAMS CHANGE. In DREAMS ADRIFT, Michael and Maeve are about to renew their vows in the big, beach side wedding Maeve had always dreamed of when Rhiannon’s unexpected arrival threatens to derail their plans. Will Rhiannon be able to win Mike back, or will his new love for Maeve be stronger than his old feelings for his high school sweetheart? The fates once conspired to change Michael’s dreams. Are they now conspiring to set his DREAMS ADRIFT?

Thank you for your interest in DREAMS ADRIFT, and may all your River Dreams come true.


About the author

DW Davis is an independent author of young adult romance novels told from the guy's perspective. RIVER DREAM was his first novel. DREAMS CHANGE and DREAMS ADRIFT continue the story begun in RIVER DREAM.
DW’s writing reflects his memories growing up along the North Carolina coast near Wrightsville and Carolina Beaches. DW left that area when he graduated high school and traveled half-way around the world and back collecting memories and experiences which help shape his characters. Now back in eastern North Carolina, DW enjoys bringing to life characters whose adventures take place in his favorite part of the world.


Contact:                      DW Davis, Author/Publisher
                       
                                    dwdavis@riversailorliterary.com
                                    www.facebook.com/RiverSailorLiterary
www.riversailorliterary.com