FreshFiction...for today's reader

Authors and Readers Blog their thoughts about books and reading at Fresh Fiction journals.

Monday, November 02, 2009

Diane Whiteside | Dancers Make Magic

DIANE WHITESIDECAPTIVE DESIRESHi, everyone! Big hugs to everyone here at Fresh Fiction for asking me to blog today. CAPTIVE DESIRES, my new paranormal romance and the sequel to CAPTIVE DREAMS, is published today!

CAPTIVE DESIRES is about Alekhsiy, the younger brother of Mykhayl, CAPTIVE DREAMS’ hero. Thanks to dragon magic, he boldly crosses the void between worlds in order to stop the ultimate threat to his people. Unfortunately, this dumps him in the middle of a science fiction convention on Earth. His sole ally is Danae Livingston, the fan fiction writer he’s always adored from afar - and who just may be enough of a sorceress to wreck havoc upon his home...

Somebody whose creativity becomes reality.

When I wrote CAPTIVE DREAMS, it was so easy to make the heroine a writer and a magic worker at the same time. Talk about wish fulfillment! Of course, there are good sides and bad sides to that, which Corinne certainly got to experience. (Oh my gosh, the payback for making an ice serpent bite Mykhayl!)

To read more of Diane's blog and to comment for a chance to win please click here.

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Thursday, February 26, 2009

Diane Whiteside | Once Upon A Time in A Place Far, Far Away

Historical authors always write about someplace that can’t be seen or felt by their reader. For KISSES LIKE A DEVIL (just published in February 2009 by Brava), I always knew Brian, William and Viola Donovan’s second son, would find his true love in turn-of the-century Europe. But I wanted it to happen in a fictional country, not someplace well-known where I’d have to walk the straight and narrow path of rigid locations and dates set down in an almanac. No, I wanted the fun of making up a country’s map and history all on my own, just like I would for a fantasy. Yes!

I decided to call it Eisengau, or “Iron Mountain” in German. Quite suitable for someplace that made topnotch guns and cannons, then sold them to the rest of the world at big time prices.

Click here to read the rest of Diane's blog.

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Wednesday, January 02, 2008

Diane Whiteside | Bond of Fire, or A French Lady Comes to Texas

Hullo! Here it is, January 2nd, the Christmas sales are over, the New Year’s Day buffet has been reduced to a neat stack of leftovers, and BOND OF FIRE, the Texas vampires’ trilogy volume 2, has finally hit the bookstores! Yes, Hélène d’Agelet, the French secret agent and firestarter, just made it into the Texas vampires trilogy.

Need I mention that she’s usually very well-groomed, as in very, very fond of designer clothing? No? Yes, I thought you might have guessed that, since she’s a French aristocrat. She enjoys a glass of good sherry but is willing to explore Texas’s unique ways of drinking beer. She’s also very bookish and prefers her flirtations take place in libraries, which isn’t where you’d expect to find one of those rare lady vampires.

Oh, and she’s passionately in love with Jean-Marie St. Just, Texas’s chief diplomat, spy, and assassin. They fell for each other across a crowded ballroom at Versailles over two centuries ago. They’ve suffered through a lot of trials and tribulations ever since, including major pieces of nastiness like the French Revolution and the Peninsular Wars. In fact, matters became so bad Jean-Marie and Hélène have spent the past two centuries thinking the other was dead.

Plus, there’s Hélène’s vicious little sister Celeste who’d dearly love to see Hélène dead. Not that Hélène realizes that – yet…

And now it’s present-day Texas and Hélène has just learned Jean-Marie is still alive. She’s on her way to Austin, eager to be reunited with her true love.

Sometimes I wonder who’s in for more changes – Texas or Hélène?

Hope you enjoy spending as much time with Hélène as I did!

Diane

http://www.dianewhiteside.com/

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Monday, September 10, 2007

Diane Whiteside | Citizen Soldier

Diane WhitesideWhat do those two words mean, anyway? Strong, stalwart, dependable, intelligent, good in a fight. Oh, and definitely an alpha male – at least to a romance author! In fact, it sounds like an good list of things I’d want to find in a hero, doesn’t it?

But when politicians talk about citizen-soldiers, they’re usually speaking about citizens who are about to leave their day jobs and go off to serve their country, probably to fight. That’s an extremely noble calling and I honor anyone who has done it. But hasn’t any such citizen-soldier also been changed – even hardened or scarred – by what he’s seen and done while he served his country?

What interests me, as an author, is what happens when that citizen-soldier comes home and becomes more of a citizen than a soldier. I want to know how his military skills and personality blends into his peacetime world – for example, how he takes the strength and discipline he gained in the military into the civilian world, how his loved ones temper his cynicism, how he learns to sleep quietly at night again. It’s reassuring to know than an ex-soldier can still grab a gun and save his beloved from the villain – but heck, I’d almost expect that of him. It’s far more satisfying for me to hear of someone who was tortured but who has learned to trust again.

The American Civil War left behind many men who knew far, far too much about fighting. Some of them had a home, while others didn’t want to go home. Many of those men headed west beyond the Mississippi.

THE IRISH DEVIL by Diane WhitesideI knew when I plotted The Irish Devil, the first of my Devil books, that my hero had to run a big freighting company. I was certain that William Donovan was a very dangerous fellow, to have survived and profited hauling dynamite through the heart of Apache territory during the worst years of Arizona’s Indian wars.

I certainly didn’t know anything about the sort of men that post-Civil War freighting companies hired. I soon found out those firms were famous for their almost-military discipline which deterred nearly attack from hostile forces – such as Apaches. They managed that trick by hiring primarily military veterans, preferably Confederate veterans.

Shortly afterward, I saw a TV show about a modern-day trucking company which hauls hazardous freight for the Defense Department. It also carries interesting items for museums and other folks who don’t want to talk about where their expensive treasures are. Every one of their drivers was ex-military and looked very dangerous indeed. Hmm…

William Donovan must have hired the Old West’s equivalent of Special Forces’ operators for Donovan & Sons. But in his case, they were citizen-soldiers, men who were ready to settle back into civilian life. Okay, so they weren’t watching grass grow on Main Street but they had turned their backs on the military for a new life. When I write about Donovan & Sons’ men in my Devil books, I can explore the issues that a citizen-soldier faces. By setting it in the Old West, I can up the stakes even more, since my heroine’s life can be at risk.

THE NORTHERN DEVIL by Diane WhitesideLucas Grainger, The Northern Devil, is such a citizen-soldier. He will always do whatever it takes to protect the woman he loves, no matter what, especially since he has no hope of reward, let alone joy. His military career didn’t encourage joy but it did give him honor, strength, and discipline. His sense of honor is what drives him into his marriage of convenience with Rachel Davis. The question is whether his strength and protectiveness will drive her away, since his discipline prevents him from sharing all of his secrets with her.

For more about Lucas and Rachel, please check outThe Northern Devil. The Irish Devil will be re-released in mass-market in October (although it’s available now in trade paperback).

Diane Whiteside
www.dianewhiteside.com


THE NORTHERN DEVIL - August 2007
"Caught by the Tides" in BEYOND THE DARK - December 2007
BOND OF FIRE, volume 2 of the Texas vampire trilogy - January 2008

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