Jeannie Lin | Favorite Tropes Featured in THE SWORD DANCER

Jeannie LinTHE SWORD DANCER
Two of my great loves are sweeping historical romances and martial arts adventures like “Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon.” My current release, THE SWORD DANCER, is a mash-up between the two. A story featuring a famous thief-catcher chasing a sword dancer across ancient China might seem like quite a departure from your standard romance, but at the core of it are some beloved tropes which is why THE SWORD DANCER was so much fun to write.

The Bathtub Scene

bathtub


At one point, Li Feng, my feisty sword dancer, confronts Thief-catcher Han in a bath house.

I can’t count the number of times I’ve seen the sexy bath scene in historical romance. She walks in on him, he spies on her…It serves the dual purpose of providing sexy times while also reminding us that our heroes and heroines, despite living in the 9th century, are indeed fresh and clean.

Dating Catwoman

catwoman
“We conducted our courtship on rooftops and fire escapes. A strange flirtation, a hide and seek, a game of cat and mouse…”
Catwoman, Whatever Happened to The Caped Crusader?

The hero and heroine of THE SWORD DANCER are on opposite sides of the law. Sometimes they’re at odds, sometimes they’ve teamed up, but they are always, always in conflict—and you’re not sure who you want to win!

I used to watch the Adam West Batman series every day and my favorite episodes were the ones with Catwoman. Julie Newmar was iconic in the way she portrayed Catwoman’s sultry, crafty, so-bad-she’s-good personality. I loved how she was trying to seduce Batman on one side, while plotting mayhem on the other. She was such a dual personality and the sexual tension between her and Batman was seared into my impressionable young mind.

Love at First Punch also known as “Slap-Slap Kiss”

love-hate


Slap-Slap-Kiss) or Love at First Punch

I always get giddy when a strong hero clashes with an even stronger heroine. In Mr. and Mrs. Smith, Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie wreck their living room in an adrenaline charged foreplay scene. In Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon, Jen and the Bandit Lo hook up after fighting almost to the death in the desert. And in THE SWORD DANCER, Han and Li Feng finally engage in their first kiss after several charged confrontations during which, as the heroine admits, “her knowledge of him was nearly as intimate as a lover’s.”

What are some of your most beloved tropes? One commenter will win a copy of THE SWORD DANCER

RT Book Reviews on THE SWORD DANCER:

“Take a passionate heroine, add an honorable hero bound by duty, a quest and a stolen cache of jewels and you have Lin’s riveting, fast-paced, lyrically written, sensual romance. Here’s a story filled with intriguing history and colorful details that also mesmerizes readers with a thrilling adventure. For those who crave a journey to a different place and time, Lin delivers.”

THE SWORD DANCER releases May 21, 2013 (June 1 ebook). This is the start of a new historical romance adventure series set in Tang Dynasty China.

To comment on Jeannie Lin’s blog please click here.

Posted in Author Guest | Leave a comment

Kathi Macias | Slowing Down the Pace

Kathi MaciasLAST CHANCE FOR JUSTICE
I hear a lot about the need to “slow down the pace” of our writing, and I know that especially applies to me. I am definitely not one of those who spends too much time on descriptions and backgrounds. Anyone who’s read my books knows I like to throw the reader right smack-dab into the action from the opening page. As a result, I get a lot of drama going on, which is great for the reader—to a point. But readers can get worn out with too much action and need a break on occasion. And so I’ve learned to slow things down and intersperse my heavy-action scenes with breathers, enabling the reader’s adrenaline to return to normal…until the next action scene, of course.

Recently, however, I had an interesting writing experience that took me beyond the occasional breather to an entirely new dimension of slower-paced writing. That doesn’t mean I took a lot longer to complete my manuscript; it does mean that I realized we authors can create character depth and compelling stories without run-for-your-life chase scenes and near-death experiences on every other page.

A couple of years ago my agent, Tamela Hancock Murray, suggested that some of her authors might want to consider doing a joint-effort project—specifically, Bloomfield. Bloomfield is a little town in “Anywhere, USA,” where life is simpler and the pace is so slow that at times it seems the residents are caught in a time-warp. But there’s a certain appeal to stepping back into a not-so-long-ago era when the latest in technology upgrades did not rule our lives, when people had time to sit on the porch and drink sun tea and chat, when the biggest thing going on all year was the annual Spring Fling Festival. And that’s what happened to me as I researched/wrote my contribution to the Bloomfield Series, LAST CHANCE FOR JUSTICE. Centered around quirky but lovable characters, a cozy little mystery, and a sweet romance, this story caught me up in its charm. I quickly found myself longing to step into the pages of my manuscript and spend some time in Bloomfield. It was so much more than a call to slow the pace of my writing; it was a call to slow the entire pace of my otherwise frantic life and “smell the roses,” as they say.

Deep down, I believe readers also long for such a break from their own fast-paced lives, which is why such books hold an appeal for them. Personally I’m glad I took the time to rein myself in a bit and to spend some time helping to develop this little town. If you’re a writer and dealing with some of those same time and schedule stresses, you might consider developing your own small-town story and see if it doesn’t help you find some balance in the midst of your busyness.

Kathi Macias is a multi-award winning writer who has authored nearly 40 books and ghostwritten several others. A former newspaper columnist and string reporter, Kathi is also a popular speaker and was named 2011 Author of the Year from BooksandAuthors.net. Kathi “Easy Writer” Macias lives in Homeland, CA, with her husband, Al. Visit her at her website.

What do you think about the pace of some of the books you’ve read recently? Slow down or keep it up? One commenter will win a copy of LAST CHANCE FOR JUSTICE.

To comment on Kathi Macias’s blog please click here.

Posted in Author Guest | Leave a comment

Kathleen Long | What Would YOU Change?

Kathleen LongCHANGING LANESI’m waving a huge hello to the gang at Fresh Fiction! It’s wonderful to be here with you. Thanks for inviting me back to blather on a little bit and celebrate the release of my newest novel, CHANGING LANES.

You know, I answered an interview question earlier this week about the significance of the new book’s title: CHANGING LANES. Specifically, the interviewer wanted to know if I could change anything about my past, would I? I quickly responded that no, I wouldn’t. But since I hit the Send key on that interview I’ve given the question a lot of in-depth thought. Guess what? My answer is still the same.

Sure, I joked about a poor hair choice I’d made (and trust me, there have been thousands), but as far as life goes, I love where I am today.

Fifteen books later, am I glad I took a risk and gave up my marketing career to try my hand at writing fiction? Yes! And, although years of infertility left my husband and I battered and bruised, our decision to adopt was the most wonderful lane change of all. Today, I look at my beautiful seven-year-old and know every moment of struggle and heartache brought us here. Thank goodness!

In CHANGING LANES, our heroine, Abby, is forced to evaluate the future she’s planned for. She must choose between fighting for what she thought she wanted, and embracing what she realizes she needs. Not my best sentence, but hopefully you get my point. Abby’s story is about learning to let go of the past AND expectations of the future in order to live fully in the moment.

Those moments may be big moments—graduations, confirmations, weddings, promotions—but they may also be everyday moments—shared laughs, family dinners, a long walk along the beach, or a few stolen moments spent counting stars.

So what am I trying to say? I’m saying that whether or not you decide to pick up a copy of CHANGING LANES, I hope you’ll embrace the story’s message. Live in the now, enjoy this moment, be thankful for the decisions and choices that brought you here, and never be afraid to change lanes. It just might be the best decision you’ll ever make!

Now it’s your turn! Have you ever changed lanes in life? Would you make the same choice again? Or would you do something completely different, if you could? I’d love to know!

Thanks for letting me stop by today! As always, it’s my pleasure to spend a little time here at Fresh Fiction.

To comment on Kathleen Long’s blog please click here.

Posted in Author Guest | Leave a comment

Spotlight on Sylvia McDaniel

Spotlight on Sylvia McDaniel

The Wanted Bride

$2.99 e-book / $9.99 paperback

e-book

Kindle
nook
iTunes
Kobo

paperback
Amazon
Barnes and Noble
Books-A-Million
Powell’s Books
Indiebound

She’s a Runaway Bride

Valerie Burrows is running from a wedding, her attorney fiancé and the law. Pampered Valerie takes a bus to nowheresville, where she learns her cash and credit cards have been stolen. Left with only her designer clothes and luggage she takes on a new identity and must learn to be self-reliant. She swears off men, especially attorneys, only to find the one man who refuses a one night stand and wants a relationship.

He’s Looking For A Wife

Matt Jordan, the Colorado Crusher, is the most successful liability lawyer in the state. After the death of his brother-in-law, he realizes he’s ready to settle down with a family of his own. His only requirements are intelligent, great-looking, wants more than a hook-up and doesn’t lie. After witnessing the lies his father told his mother, he demands complete honesty. Yet Valerie Brown shows him sometimes in order to find yourself, you must become someone else. Even if that means lying.


Chapter One

“I need a one-way ticket to anywhere,” Valerie Burrows commanded the girl behind the bus counter in downtown Dallas. A charred piece of her wedding veil sagged onto her face. Impatiently, she flipped the singed lace away, her throat closing off the tears that threatened her vision.

On what was supposed to be the happiest day of her life, she reeked of smoke, not flowers, saw red not white, tasted bile not cake.

Glancing up from the counter the clerk’s eyes widened, making Valerie acutely aware of her appearance. On what was supposed to be the happiest day of her life, she felt traumatized, not joyous.

“Whe…re do you want to go?” the clerk stammered.

“Anywhere, as long as I leave in the next five minutes,” Valerie insisted, wishing people would stop staring. So she looked like a crazy woman. After this morning maybe she was a little loco.

“The bus to Amarillo is loading now,” the agent advised, her large brown eyes riveted to Valerie. “I have one seat left. The one-way fare is sixty-five dollars.”

Though she preferred to travel by plane, there was no time or way to get to the airport. She could take the bus or stay and face the consequences of her actions.

Valerie dug the cash out of her Bottega Veneta purse and handed the money to the ticket agent. “I’ll take it.”

Dirty lace from her wedding veil fell onto her face again, so she yanked the offending garment off her head and threw the veil on top of her matching Louis Vuitton luggage.

The beautiful lace of her Vera Wang wedding gown was streaked with gray and black. Burn streaks made a crazy pattern on the silk that didn’t accessorize the seed pearls.

The heel of one of her Stuart Weitzman pumps had snapped several blocks ago, and her feet were blistered. And yet her heart beat on in spite of her ruined wedding.

The clerk handed her the ticket, sympathy in her dark eyes. “The bus is ready. You’re the last one to board.”

Not even time to change. Head held high, spine locked in place, she limped to the white steel carriage, her suitcases trailing behind.

There, she handed her two suitcases to a gawking young man. He opened his mouth to speak, but she held up her hand. “Just load my luggage.”

She glanced up to see faces pressed against the glass windows of the bus, gaping at her like she was a freak show.

Hadn’t these people ever seen a runaway bride in real life before? Julia Roberts may have made the movie, but she didn’t own the copyright to wedding disasters.

With her carry-on bag hanging from her shoulder, Valerie marched up the steps of the waiting bus as if she walked around in a wedding gown every day. The babble of sixty voices ceased as she handed the driver her ticket.

He mumbled, “Lord, I need to retire.”

Her silk dress pressed against her legs and swished as she made her way to the only empty seat on her getaway bus. Thank God she’d ditched the petticoats in the Corvette.

A gray-haired woman glanced at her as she put her luggage in the overhead bin.

“Hm hm hm, I can’t wait to hear this story,” the elderly Hispanic woman said. “Are you all right?”

Valerie plopped in the seat, her ruined silk gown making a mighty swish. She exhaled loudly, her heart aching, her eyes blurring with unshed tears. For the last hour she’d been holding her breath while making her escape.

But now, now all the pain she’d carefully controlled broke free and she chuckled. Hysterical laughter rumbled from deep inside her, echoed through the bus. A single tear rolled down her cheek.

“I am now.”


Don’t Miss The Cuvier Widows

They met over HIS dead body

Three Wives One Dead Husband

WRONGED
Wronged
Cuvier Widows
#1
BN.com | Amazon | Smashwords

BETRAYED
Betrayed
Cuvier Widows
#2
BN.com | Amazon | Smashwords

BEGUILED
Beguiled
Cuvier Widows
#3
BN.com | Amazon | Smashwords

Website | Blog | Plotting Princess Blog | Facebook | Twitter

Posted in Author Spotlight | Leave a comment

Elle James | Come with me to the Bayou

Elle JamesTraveling to research a trip is such fun. For those of you who don’t get out enough or far enough south, come along with me on this trip to Louisiana I took with my sister last fall.
bayou swamp
bayou sunset
creole mansion
cathedral
We started from my parents home in a little town called Arkadelphia, Arkansas, early in the morning. The sun was just coming up as we hit the interstate headed toward Texarkana. That was the easy part, then we cut around Shreveport and drove south into bayou country. After a long few hours of traveling we were in bayou country where the roads paralleled cannels and cypress trees towered out of the water. We stopped along the way at a mom-and-pop joint for a yummy taste of Shrimp Okra Gumbo and continued south to our first stop, the farthest point south, Grand Isle, a small patch of islands connected to the mainland by bridges. We were thinking vacation spot and, to some, it is. The beaches were eh, but it seemed the fishing was what people come for. The houses were on stilts, 8-10 feet above the ground (think hurricanes and storm surges). But you won’t find a better sunset than what we found there.

Next day we headed north to Thibodeaux and arranged to take an airboat tour of the swamp. Our Cajun guide was crazy! He drove like a bat out of hell, and scared the bejeezus out of us. We loved every minute! Then it was into the bayou where the alligators roam and sincerely deranged people rob alligator nests for the alligator farms. Our guide pulled a twelve foot alligator out of the water by his tail so that I could pet it. Uh huh. I was the only passenger on the boat brave (or foolish) enough to touch it. Yay me! Then we skimmed through a cypress forest where Spanish moss draped the trees and cypress knees poked out of the water by the hundreds. We found an alligator nest with a mamma alligator guarding it. She was smaller but less agreeable than the big guy. Don’t be messin’ with a mamma and her eggs! Beautiful ride on the bayou, satisfying conclusion to that day in Louisiana. Next day we toured a couple of really cool sugar plantation houses from the 1800′s. Oak Alley was my favorite with its stately avenue of ancient oak trees lining the walk up to the front. We drank mint juleps and listened to a costumed guide tell of the former residents and their family history.

Next stop? New Orleans! We stayed at the Royal Sonesta on Bourbon Street in the French Quarter. Had our palms read in front of St. Louis Cathedral, visited the Voodoo shops, ate beignets at Cafe Du Monde and watched the crazies on Bourbon Street at night.

Do I recommend a trip to Louisiana? You bet. But make sure you get that airboat ride. It was the best! I chose the bayous as the setting for my CAJUN MAGIC series because where else will you get the flavor of the south quite like it is in Cajun Country?

CAJUN MAGIC Series coming out this year from Entangled Publishing. VOODOO ON THE BAYOU (Feb 2013), VOODOO FOR TWO (April 2013) and DEJA VOODOO (Jun 2013)

VOODOO ON THE BAYOU
Voodoo On The Bayou
Cajun Magic
#1.0
February 2013

VOODOO FOR TWO
Voodoo For Two
Cajun Magic
#2.0
May 2013

DEJA VOODOO
Deja Voodoo
Cajun Magic
#3.0
July 2013

Comment to win a copy of VOODOO FOR TWO

To comment on Elle James’s blog please click here.

Posted in Author Guest | Leave a comment

Jeff Horton | What Writing Means To Me

Jeff HortonCYBERSP@CEMy name is Jeff Horton, and I am a novelist. I say I am a novelist and not an author because an author can be someone that writes about anything including novels, historical biographies, travel guides, etc., while a novelist is an artist, a painter if you will. Imagination is the paint and the keyboard the paintbrush.

I enjoy writing because for me it is pure creativity. From my imagination proceeds people, places, sights, sounds, and events which have never really existed. For me, writing a novel is sort of like watching a movie. I start writing with an idea of what I’m after, but the story truly takes on a life of its own as I write, often taking me in a direction I never could have imagined it going in before. The end result is that I have no idea how the story is going to end myself until I have finished the first draft. Even then, the story can morph as I make my way through a series of inevitable revisions where the rough stone is cut and chipped away at, before being polished into what I consider to be a work of art.

When I write, I strive to create story lines that are meaningful on many levels. I like to explore and understand the emotions, the struggles and the pain that we feel as human beings, as well as the joy. It is also important that there is a message in the story, a warning, a message of hope, etc. I want readers to always come away having learned something new, something valuable, and something important. These are ambitious goals, of course, and unfortunately, I’m never as successful as I would like to be at meeting these goals.

Another thing that is important to me as a novelist is that the characters, the events, and the setting all feel very real to the reader. This then is a key, in my opinion, to drawing the reader more deeply into the story. People are complex creatures and rarely (if ever) do we really know anyone. It is unfair therefore to suggest to readers that a character is a cardboard figure. While I may not spend as much time on every character as I would like in the interest of brevity, I do try and ensure that at least the key players are well-developed, and that they also change and grow as the story progresses.

My first three books were mostly futuristic, apocalyptic thrillers, all written for the masses but from a Christian worldview. My faith in God makes up a big part of who I am and what I do, and I’m sure it comes through in my writing. My next book, which reflects that faith, is different than the first three because it’s more of a YA/juvenile novel entitled THE WAY OF NACOR. My goal (always lofty!) with The Way of Nacor was to create a well-blended recipe of a little Chronicles of Narnia and a little Pilgrims Progress, with a pinch of science-fiction thrown in as well. In THE WAY OF NACOR, a family of children is stranded on another world, where they face many obstacles as they try to find their way home. The novel following THE WAY OF NACOR is a techno-thriller entitled CYBERSP@CE. I like to think of it as Tom Clancy meets Michael Crichton (two of my favorite authors).

EXCERPT-CYBERSP@CE

Several hours passed, and the foursome returned to the warehouse. “Come! We must turn on the television and watch the news. How else will we know for sure whether the attack worked as planned?” asked Chervanko, as he led the way into the office where a small television sat, and turned it so they could see. He turned it on and flipped through the channels until an image of two nuclear reactors appeared. Underneath was a caption that read, “Nuclear Meltdown Possible At New York Power Plant.” The reporter was saying something as Chervanko turned up the volume.

“—and the local sheriff’s office informed us only moments ago that they have done all that they can do to evacuate the area, given the extremely congested roadways which are already virtually nothing but parking lots. The National Guard is also being deployed, although few believe they will be able to evacuate so many in such a brief period of time. If you’ve just joined us, we have some very important, late-breaking news. New York City, along with the Department of Homeland Defense, held a joint press conference just fifteen minutes ago, announcing that a serious problem was detected at the Indian Lake nuclear power plant only two hours ago. The problem, which has been closely monitored since, is reported to be a problem with the coolant system at the plant, a problem which could very well lead to a meltdown. While not yet calling such a meltdown imminent, the government has issued an evacuation for anyone living or working within thirty miles of the Indian Lake nuclear power plant, warning of a deadly threat from radiation fallout facing anyone within the evacuation zone. We’ve invited Dr. Marcella Blanco to join us; she is an expert with the CDC. Welcome, Dr. Blanco, thank you for joining us.”

“Thank you for having me.”

“Dr. Blanco, if both reactors do somehow melt down, how bad will it be? Will it result in many deaths?”

“Absolutely. Early estimates from a decade ago suggested that at least one hundred thousand people would receive a fatal dose of radiation. That area has seen a significant amount of growth over the past decade, however, so the number has climbed to perhaps as high as one hundred twenty-five thousand people.”

The anchor sat silently, looking stunned for a moment. It was one of those rare moments of silence on live television when no one speaks. One of the producers must have yelled at her through her earpiece because she suddenly jolted out of it.

“Excuse me, Dr. Blanco, but you’re saying over one hundred twenty-five thousand people are going to die tonight?”

Her face was still pale, white as a sheet.

“Well, if both reactors melt down, as many as one hundred twenty-five thousand people would likely be exposed to a fatal dose of radiation, yes. Depending on their level of exposure, death could take days, weeks, possibly even months to occur.”

“If someone cannot get away in time, is there anything they can do?” “Anyone who is within ten to twenty miles of the plant and is unable to leave should get inside and as far underground as possible. But let me please reiterate that this is a very serious danger to everyone in the area. If at all possible, everyone within a thirty mile radius should evacuate immediately. Please don’t wait until it’s too late.”

“Thank you, Dr. Blanco.”

“You’re very welcome.”

The news anchor turned to face the camera.

“Next up, we have Jason Michaels, a former consultant to the Department of Homeland Security. Welcome Mr. Michaels, it’s great to have you with us today.”

“Thank you, Michelle; it’s great to be here, though I wish it were under better circumstances of course.”

“Of course,” she repeated. “So Jason, do you have any idea what happened at the plant; was it some kind of equipment failure?”

“From what I’m told, Michelle, at approximately 2:05 p.m. today, the systems at the plant that control the water used for cooling the control rods in both reactors suddenly shut down, but only after sending instructions to the programmable logic controllers to close all valves in the cooling system. At this time the PLCs continue to be unresponsive and all valves remain closed. Once the super-heated water evaporates, the rods will be exposed and the reactors will melt down. I’ll tell you something else, too…the most disturbing aspect of this disaster is that the shutdown appears to have been done intentionally by someone, remotely.”

“So the system was shut down remotely. Why would someone with the power company have done that intentionally, while the plants are still in operation; isn’t that dangerous?”

“Very. Apparently the systems were not shut down by anyone at the plant though. Based on all of the information I’ve been able to gather, everyone associated with the Indian Lake plant denies having anything to do with what’s happened. My contacts told me that the system wasn’t designed like that anyway. That’s why this was, in my opinion, an act of terrorism.”

“Wow, that is really frightening!” exclaimed the anchor, staring in disbelief. “How could an unauthorized person access the water control system remotely? Why would that even be possible?”

“I asked that same question. It seems that the company installed the remote access capability so they would be able to activate the water control pumps remotely in the event of some kind of accident, in case there was no one able to do it at the plant itself. Unfortunately, with so many systems connected to the Internet these days, it’s possible—let me stress possible—that someone hacked in, circumvented the considerable security, and shut them down remotely.”

“But wouldn’t it require substantial resources to be able to pull something like that off without being caught?”

“Yes, it would. Typically, only nation states have the kind of access to the resources needed to pull something like this off, not to mention the skills. It might be possible that an individual could do this I suppose, but I don’t see how.”

“Does the DHS have any idea where the attack originated?”

“Well, as you noted earlier, I no longer work at the DHS. A source of mine does still work there, however, and they called me thirty minutes after they learned the systems had been shutdown.”

“What did they tell you?”

“They told me that they had traced the IP address of the intruder.”

“To where?” asked the anchor.

“China.”

To comment on Jeff Horton’s blog please click here.

Posted in Author Guest | Leave a comment

Fresh Pick | GATSBY’S GIRL by Caroline Preston

Gatsby's Girl

May 2006
Featuring: F. Scott Fitzgerald; Ginevra King
320 pages
ISBN: 0618537252
Hardcover
$24.00
Fiction
Buy at Amazon.com
Fresh Book of the Day

Caroline Preston

Gatsby’s Girl
by Caroline Preston
A Novel of First Love…

She was two months past her sixteenth birthday, a rich man’s daughter who had been told she was pretty far too often for her own good. He was nineteen years old, a poor boy full of ambition. They met at a country club dance in St. Paul, Minnesota, in January 1916.

Ginevra was F. Scott Fitzgerald’s first love, but despite their intense epistolary romance, the relationship wouldn’t last. After throwing him over with what he deemed “supreme boredom and indifference,” she married a handsome young aviator from the right background.

Caroline Preston deftly evokes the entire arc of Ginevra’s story from her first romantic meeting with Scott to the second act of her sometimes charmed, sometimes troubled life. Ginevra ruminates over what might have been had she picked the writer instead of the aviator. Furtively reading the now famous Fitzgerald’s work, Ginevra sees herself in his characters, and not just as the spoiled debutante he’d known, but also uncannily predicting the woman she has become–cracks and all.

An affecting story of two people: one world famous, one a private person known only through her portrayals in priceless works of fiction, Gatsby’s Girl is a tremendously entertaining yet moving novel about the powerful forces of first love, memory, and art.

Previous Picks

Posted in Fresh Pick | Leave a comment

Alexandrea Weis | What’s the Difference Between a Love Story and a Romance?

Alexandrea WeisACADIAN WALTZ
My first book, TO MY SENSES, has been called a romance by some and more than a romance, a love story if you will, by others. Is there a difference between a romance and a love story? I believe that difference is in the eye of the reader. For some, a romance novel may follow a set of circumstances that promise the inevitable happy ending, but a love story often takes the reader on a much different ride. It engages the reader on a deeper level with emotionally charged characters and poignant, life-altering choices. Romances may bring a comforting conclusion, but a love story does not because, as many of us know from experience, love is never predictable. Some romances may be forgettable, but a great love story will live on in the reader’s memory for many years to come.

Why are love stories so engaging? Perhaps it is because of the nature of love itself. Love changes us, and can alter our direction in life, as Nicci Beauvoir was awakened by David Alexander’s love in TO MY SENSES, or Pamela was transformed by Daniel’s love in my novel, BROKEN WINGS. Such great love can act as a sudden wind on a calm sea, righting the sails of a ship, giving us a new course and a new horizon to aim for. We are penetrable souls, influenced and defined by whom we love. In such a way, love can move mountains or melt even the coldest heart, as is the case with my favorite character, Dallas August in RECOVERY.

When looking back on our lives, it has never been the house, car or other material things we long for, but those individuals most cherished whom we hold in our hearts forever. Kara Barton realized this in DIARY OF A ONE-NIGHT STAND, and Dallas August also has such an epiphany during his adventures in my fifth book, THE SECRET BROKERS. These characters learned that in that final moment of life, we remember those we have loved, and hope to carry that love with us to the other side.

It is not to say that the love shared between the characters of a “happily ever after” romance novel is any less sincere than the emotional ties binding two star-crossed, and sometimes tragically torn apart, lovers. Maybe it is when characters are taken to heart and become embedded within our psyche that they move from the light fragrance of a romance to the rich bouquet of a love story. Where romance may tweak at our hunger for passion and adventure, a love story reaches down into the inner workings of our soul and touches us in a way never expected.

That is what I hope my books do; takes the reader on a journey through the highs and lows of love. Teaching everyone that it is the attainment of life’s greatest endeavor that matters most, and everything else we garner along the way simply pales in comparison. As Nora Kehoe, from my latest novel ACADIAN WALTZ, said, “our souls are not judged by the sins we accumulate in life, but by the love we take with us after our life has ebbed away.”

To comment on Alexandrea Weis’s blog please click here.

Posted in Author Guest | Leave a comment

Molly McAdams | From failure to bestselling author

Molly McAdamsSTEALING HARPER
One of the best questions I get from readers, bloggers, and other authors, is, “Did you always know you wanted to be a writer?” Ha. No. If you even knew what I was like growing up, the fact that I’m doing this now would blow your mind!

I was definitely one of those students that didn’t read the books that were mandatory reads in school, I was also one of those students that failed the first half of one of their English classes in high school because I was … err … am absolutely awful at grammar! But the thing that makes everyone laugh the most, is that I was one of those students that failed out of a Creative Writing course in college.

It wasn’t that I didn’t do the homework, or that I didn’t try, I was just really terrible. The professor told me I wouldn’t have a career in writing, and I thought that was just fine because I didn’t want to be a writer anyway. I’d just needed that class for my major, unfortunately.

Needless to say, when I published my first novel, my entire family didn’t believe me. I got practically the same reaction from both sisters and my parents. “You didn’t write a book, you don’t even read! You hated English. Really? You really wrote a book? No, no you didn’t.” It wasn’t until four years ago at a job that had a lot of downtime, did I start reading. I fell in love with love stories, and realized that’s why I’d hated reading in the first place. All the books that had been pushed on me didn’t have my kind of love stories in them. I was twenty years old and kept thinking, “Where have I been all my life? Where have these books been?”

A year later I started writing out dreams I was having, and that led to expanding them. I still didn’t think I was writing a book, I was just having fun with my dreams. Almost a year and a half ago I started TAKING CHANCES, the first novel I published, and I haven’t looked back since. I found that I love pouring my soul into my writing just as much as I love getting fully caught up in these love stories other authors have written. So it may have been my little secret for a while, and I may have blown everyone in my family’s mind since it was so unlike me, but now my third book is about to be published and I can’t wait for y’all to read it.

Understanding grammar, or not. Being able to achieve someone else’s idea of “creative level”, or not. I write what I know, and I write what I love. Don’t ever let anyone tell you what you can, or cannot, be.

Now for some cool news…

Molly McAdams will release e-book novella STEALING HARPER two weeks early if we can reach the pre-order goal! Yes, you can read Chase’s side of the story A WHOLE TWO WEEKS EARLIER! If we can get the thermometer up to scene four, Molly’s publisher will release the e-book on May 21st (rather than June 4th)! Be sure to order by the deadline May 12th!

Amazon | BN.com | iTunes

And here you go, the exclusive excerpt for today…

Exclusive STEALING HARPER Excerpt:

“GOD,” I GROANED and couldn’t help it when my hand formed a fist in her hair, urging her to continue – I was so close. She moaned around me and my eyes shut as I lost it. From the way she jerked, I knew she hadn’t been expecting it. I probably should have warned her, but that was the last thing I’d been thinking about just then.

As soon as she was done I let her pull away and looked around to see if anyone had come to this side of the house as I put myself back in my pants.

“Thanks, Chase.”

I froze momentarily, then huffed a short laugh and glanced at her as she stood back up. She was thanking me? Usually I had to do something for them first before they started thanking me, but I wasn’t one to judge. “Uh, yeah. Ready to go back in?”

She nodded enthusiastically and reached for my hand, so I quickly draped my arm around her shoulder and led us through the backyard and into my house. “Oh Chase, can we dance? I love this song! Pretty please?”

Pretty please? What are we, five? I tried not to groan and forced a smile on my face. We walked toward the center of the mass of people dancing in my living room and my hands went to whateverhernamewas’s hips as she ground her butt into me. Her back arched and I had an even better view of her already-exposed chest.

“I’m so glad we can start this before school starts, I was dying to date you all last year,” she whispered and I ground my teeth.

Date? Oh hell no. I tried to remove my hands from her hips at the same time she pushed them tighter to her body, and someone knocked into us. My already narrowed eyes looked up to see wide, terrified, gray eyes turn toward me. I literally felt my heart skip a few painful beats before my pulse started racing.

Want to read the first excerpt? Check out USA Today Happily Ever After

the next installment of awesome will be on May 8th at Bookalicious

About STEALING HARPER

Chase Grayson has never been interested in having a relationship that lasts longer than it takes for him and his date to get dressed again. But then he stumbles into a gray-eyed girl whose innocence pours off her, and everything changes. From the minute Harper opens her mouth to let him know just how much he disgusts her, he’s hooked.

But a princess deserves a Prince Charming who can make her dreams come true. Not a guy who can turn her life into a nightmare.

All good intentions go out the window when Harper starts to fall for the guy Chase has come to view as a brother. He wanted to protect her by keeping her away, but he can’t stand to see her with anyone else, and he’ll do anything to make her his. But when it comes down to Harper choosing between the two, will Chase have the strength to step back from the girl who has become his whole world if it means she’ll be happy?

Lines will be crossed. Friendships will be put to the test. And hearts will be shattered.

Connect with Molly via Molly McAdams Blogspot | Twitter | Facebook

Amazon | BN.com | iTunes

To comment on Molly McAdams’s blog please click here.

Posted in Author Guest | Comments Off

Leslie Lehr | What Will My Daughters Think?

Leslie LehrWHAT A MOTHER KNOWSPopular novelists use pseudonyms to write romance novels, and romance novelists use them to write erotica. But when I wrote What A Mother Knows, it was my real name going on the cover. So naturally, when I wrote the big love scene – okay, sex scene – I worried about what my daughters would think.

The story is about a mother’s quest to find her daughter, so already it hits close to home. At first, I was more concerned with how the girls might judge the daughter’s part. Then I realized I was working even harder to get the mother’s part right, to make her believable and sexy, all at the same time. It wasn’t just the romance that worried me, it was the fact that there are some undeniable similarities between us. Sure, Michelle is taller and thinner, but her desperate need to protect her daughter? That’s all me. So when it was time to write the big love scene, I started to sweat.

I wanted to make it as hot as possible, but my daughters will read it as soon as it comes out. I wanted to go crazy, but there was important plotting to be done amid all the heavy breathing. When Michelle develops a kickass attitude and takes charge of her life, she takes charge in the bedroom as well. She’s not actually in a bedroom, mind you, but in a unique location that makes both the sex and the story better.

I imagined the most exciting seduction I could, the kind every woman dreams about. There is champagne and chocolate, her lacey red lingerie pressed against his rock hard chest, and enough heat to make it last until morning, when there is a surprise twist in the story.

It’s a hot scene. How do I know? My agent never commented on it. Even my editor, who made notes throughout the rest of the book, left these margins conspicuously blank. For a few days, I wondered if either had actually read it. Then I realized that they didn’t say anything because there was nothing to say. It works.

So here I am, an author hoisted by her own petard. My novel has a main character similar to me, with a sex scene that is decidedly hot. Will my daughters wonder if I’ve had sex like that? Will they recognize the lingerie from the stash in my drawer? Or will they rcognize that great sex is every woman’s right, including their own?

I don’t know, and I’m not about to ask. But that doesn’t make me a wimp. After all, that’s my real name on the cover.

Leslie Lehr‘s latest novel is What a Mother Knows (May 2013) She is the author of WIFE GOES ON and 66 LAPS, which won the Pirates Alley Faulkner Society Gold Medal. Her essays about mothering and parenthood have been featured on The Today Show and were excerpted in Arianna Huffington’s bestseller, On Becoming Fearless. A screenwriter based in Los Angeles, she is a member of the Authors Guild and teaches creative writing at UCLA Writers’ Extension. www.leslielehr.com

To comment on Leslie Lehr’s blog please click here.

Posted in Author Guest | Comments Off