by Cindy R. Williams
Eat, write and be merry for tomorrow we sleep. Do you live your life like this sometimes? Do you have writing jags that keep you flying and you stay up most of the night? Maybe you are in the re-writing stage, the editing stage. the proofing stage. No matter what stage, it can happen.
I'm guilty. Sometimes the world revolves around my manuscript. I have decided it is NOT good. Oh, once in a great while it's okay, but for the most part NOT! I believe it's possible to go off the deep end if we don't learn to balance the writing life. It's far healthier for mind, body, emotions and spirit to live with a good dose of the staples of life. "Moderation of all things" is my new motto.
Read up on some of the big name authors, and you'll find that many of them plant themselves in their chair anywhere from two to eight hours a day, on a regular basis. They respect their writing and treat it as a job. Then they STOP! They enjoy the other wonderful things in their lives.
Sounds like a plan, a good plan. No need to sacrifice all sanity nor my lovely family. It can all work together with moderation in all things.
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By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/4/2010
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By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 7/14/2010
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What's a query letter you say? It's a letter that is meant to convince an editor that your story is the greatest story ever told and that they absolutely have to have it even more than chocolate. A query letter is your proposal of sorts, your calling card, you’re desperate plea to "PICK ME! PICK ME!" without sounding the least bit whiny or desperate.
I have been flying on Sparkin the dragon's noble back over Arizona for three years now and yet found the query letter about as much work. Wait a minute, hold the phone, and your horses or whatever it is you hold. I actually found the book an absolute delight to write. I love the characters, even the sinister ones and many times had to be called back to this planet to fix dinner, and attend to the worldly needs of my wonderful family. The query letter was more of a tear out your hair exercise that lasted through several months of research and 42 --not a typo --different versions, one to please each query letter expert. I studied the blurbs on the back of a gazillion books, and finally had an epiphany. Why not complete the exercise outlined by one of my most favorite agents that I was blessed to attend her presentation last April at the LDStorymakers Writers Conference?
So after the "why did it take you so long to figure it out?" moment, I finally hit upon what the heart of this book is about and what makes it unique. I realized it is a story of youth learning that they can do hard things, and learning that it is okay to be yourself even if you are different than others.
As Sparkin of the amazerful Stoneloch Dragon Clan would say, "It is ever so sweet" to have it complete.
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 5/25/2010
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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SUMMER TREASURE HUNT RULES:
You can send in an entry for each day’s prize, or only for those prizes that strike your fancy. The rules are simple:
(1) Go to the website or blog indicated for each day, find the answer to the question for that day, then EMAIL THE ANSWER WITH YOUR NAME AND MAILING ADDRESS to [email protected]. I promise you will not wind up on any mailing lists. This is only to facilitate the receipt of your prize. All entries will be deleted at the end of the contest.
(2) Please send a separate entry for each day and type the day you are entering in the subject line. (Such as: Summer Treasure Hunt, June 1; Summer Treasure Hunt, June 2, etc).
(3) Deadline for each day: Midnight PST
(4) The winner will be contacted and announced on the day following the deadline.
All winners will be “drawn” by http://www.random.org/.
You do not have to wait until the designated day to enter. You can start sending in your entries right now, or begin entering at any point along the way. And check back here each day between June 2nd-July 9th to read the names of the winners.
If you have any questions, feel free to email Joyce DiPastena at [email protected]
SPONSOR: Donna Hatch
PRIZE: QUEEN IN EXILE, (fantasy romance), autographed by author
QUESTION: The princess must rely upon her magic to save whom? (Hint: Look under “Bookshelf” tab)
WEBSITE/BLOG: http://www.donnahatch.net/
OPEN TO INTERNATIONAL ENTRIES
WINNER:
ANSWER:
JUNE 2
SPONSOR: Laurie Lewis
PRIZE: AWAKENING AVERY (women's fiction), autographed copy
QUESTION: Avery's signal that she isn't handling her husband's death very well comes to her when she tosses what into what? (Hint: Look under books & reviews, then click on the cover to AWAKENING AVERY and read the first chapter)
WEBSITE/BLOG: http://www.laurielclewis.com/
USA ENTRIES ONLY
WINNER:
ANSWER:
JUNE 3
SPONSOR: E.A. West
PRIZE: RILEY'S MISSION (PDF: romantic suspense)
QUESTION: Where does Jade sit aft
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 4/28/2010
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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"I declared bankruptcy this morning. We've lost everything." Kenzie's father took a breath and continued. "We have thirty days to auction off our belongings and move out of the house."
Kenzie's mouth dropped open with disbelief. "Bankrupt," she whispered. That one word had the power to reduce her life from chauffeurs and credit cards to nothing.
"While we sort this out," her father continued, "we've made arrangements for you to stay with your aunt and uncle in Paris."
Paris. That wouldn't be so bad.
But wait . . . her uncle didn't live in Europe. He lived in Idaho.
Reading this blurb on the back of the book had me thinking two things. This Kenzie is a spoiled brat, and the book is going to be full of situations that will humble her to the point of becoming a nice and likable person.
I was right on both accounts. The personal growth arc that Bell creates for her main character is well done.
At first I had little sympathy for Kenzie. I felt like saying, "Oh waaaahh." Kenzie just seemed like a girl with a silver spoon and the world owes her a living mentality. Bell soon changed that image by giving glimpses into Kenzie that proved that she really was a nice kid with bad things happening to her. Bell dug deep into the character and created a well rounded young lady that rose to the occasion. My respect grew for the socialite as the story progressed.
One of my favorite characters was Rambo, aka Adam. He is about as perfect as a guy can be even though he has been kicked out of the social stratosphere for a horrible crime he was accused of, but not convicted. He brought a breath of fresh air into the town, and the story. He also seemed to bring the best out in Kenzie.
Bell fleshes out the surrounding characters by creating firm images complete with, mannerisms, and personalities.
Kenzie was given the farm chore of gathering eggs from the hens. Bell did a great job making it seem real and added humor to the situation. Readers will experience it right along with Kenzie.
I got a little confused when Kenzie turned her nose up at oatmeal for breakfast because of her strict diet as a ballerina, yet ate shakes and french fries without batting an eye. I chocked it up to the fact that she must be allowing herself the full experience of living a new and different life.
"Summer in Paris" is a fun read about coming of age and a little romance twisted throughout. Bell throws in a good mystery to keep you turning the pages. I recommend the book to read while lounging on a hammock in Paris, Idaho o
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 4/20/2010
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Is it possible for love to conquer all? "I'll Know You By Heart" is a timeless romance that explores the possibility that relationships span the entire realm of eternity---a story about abuse, hardship, and betrayal---ultimately a story about the healing power of everlasting true love.
So far so good. I love a good story, and a good romance at that. I knew from the very first page that I was in for a bit of a rough ride following Stephanie as she dealt with and faces her horrific trials. Kimberly Job doesn't hold back on the reality of the pain, suffering and fear that accompany abuse by a spouse. She also fills the reader with hope, and comfort as she takes them on a journey of discovery, strength, honesty, and healing.
In the story, Stephanie has three children and lives in constant fear from her husband's violent temper. She puts up with it for years, convincing herself that it's really her own fault and that if she could only be better, or prettier, or perfect, etc., he would not treat her this way. It was a harrowing look inside what a battered woman deals with. Job is spot on in when she writes the scene where Stephanie grows a back bone; when the abuse spills over to her sixteen year old son. I was with her, urging her along as I read. This can't continue. She MUST take responsibility and not allow her children to be abused. Job writes with such clarity, insight and honesty that the characters become real, their pain and suffering flows out of the pages and into your heart.
This novel is not all about the anguish and tragedy of abuse, but also one of great hope, healing and growth. Job brings the story to life and takes the reader on quite an emotional ride. One cannot help but be changed after reading this book. Stephanie comes full circle when her Spirit is no longer surrounded by constant fear. She is able to recognize those inner whisperings and follow her heart. The reader is able to come to grasp with our eternal nature along with Stephanie in the story.
Job has created a masterpiece of hope. "I'll Know You By Heart" is a must read.
To purchase your own copy of "I'll Know You By Heart"
by Valor Publishing Group LLC., click here.
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 4/14/2010
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Three tribes are at war on the planet Gan, unaware that the sing of Christ's birth on an unknown word--Earth--is about to appear in the heavens.
During a bloody skirmish with Gideonite troops, Jonathan of Daniel spares Pekah, a young enemy soldier, gaining his trust forever. These two distant brothers from estranged tribes covenant with each other to end the war being waged by a self-proclaimed emperor, and soon discover the intentions of a far more dangerous foe--a sinister general bent on ruling those he can bring into subjection and destroying all others.
I must admit my curiosity was piqued by this mixture of history and religious beliefs being tied together and viewed through the eyes of people living on another planet. I'm not a big fan of war books and movies, but started reading with hopes of a good tale. I was not disappointed. Farley weaves an interesting story of three very different groups of people dealing with intrigue, power, murder, romance, obedience, faith, trust and forgiveness.
The names of the characters are excellent and in keeping with the story. The battle strategies were mapped out with finesse. Farley seems to know how to stage a war. The weapons he described lent themselves well to the story. The Thorn was quite unusual, and an interesting object in itself. The sword Jonathan used was particularly fascinating. The stones that glowed with light when they rubbed them were another creative touch.
The two sister suns, Aqua and Azure, were mentioned by name often throughout the book which leads one to believe they play some significant part yet to be revealed. There was quite a lot of sniffling and teary or blurry eyes by grown men and hardened soldiers and I'm not sure about carpet on another world 2000 years ago.
Spoiler Alert: The anointing of the King and the two marriages were lumped together in one event which seemed a little anti-climactic and a bit rushed since each event was a big deal.
Included in the book is a preview of chapter one of the next book which contains a disturbing hook. As an advocate for the sanctity of one's person, and particularly my daughters, I was upset to leave the new situation unresolved, but isn't that what a good hook does? I'll have to read book two and hope there is some kind of justice.
Farley takes us on a journey back in time and gives a good look into what might have been in a universe far away. He certainly makes the possibility come alive in his novel.
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 4/7/2010
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Ronda Gibb Hinrichsen was born and raised in Rexburg, Idaho, received her Associates Degree in English from Ricks College and studied writing at Weber State University and Utah State University. Her first article was published in a 1994 magazine, and she has since published numerous articles and short stories in print and online mediums. Her first mystery novel, MISSING, was published in 2009, and her second novel, TRAPPED, will be available in stores next month.
CRW: Welcome, Ronda, to Writers Mirror. It is a pleasure to have you be the Wednesday Writer today on Writers Mirror.
Ronda: Thanks, Cindy. I’ve been looking forward to this moment.
CRW: Please tell us when you first began to write?
Ronda: I’ve been “writing” since the 6th grade, but my first published article came out in a 1994 magazine.
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Ronda: The hunger to write, no matter what. But I also have a strong desire to write books that “lift” my readers. Too few people realize how important their goodness is to this world.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Ronda: I try to write 5-6 days a week. I usually try to write as much as I can within the time I have. Sometimes that time involves research and planning, so it’s hard to plan a number of words. Not an excuse, I promise. Just the way it is for me at this point in my career.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Ronda: Any and all other responsibilities. Honestly, the desire to write is so strong in me that I have to make myself do other things. I do better, however, if my schedule allows me to write in the morning. That way I don’t feel as guilty the rest of the day about not writing.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Ronda: If I’m having a crazy busy day, then I try to AT LEAST write down ideas or even a sentence or two on my WIP.
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing? Both crazy good and crazy bad.
Ronda: By crazy do you mean obsessed? I think I am a bit obsessed about writing which brings the good and bad that goes with that “condition.” But you know, it wasn’t until “MISSING” came out and I began
to have overwhelmed moments piled on top of overwhelmed moments (mostly related to promotion) that I actually thought “Why am I doing this?” The thought didn’t last long, though.
CRW: Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Ronda: My husband’s apartment in China. I don’t consider my car during my kids’ soccer practices as weird, because I think that kind of thing is becoming the norm among mom-writers.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Ronda: “MISSING” took 3 years because it was my first and I had a huge learning curve. I also extensively rewrote it three or more times. “TRAPPED” too
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 3/30/2010
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 12/30/2009
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By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 12/23/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Though Liz Adair lives in the Pacific Northwest, she has desert in her DNA. Born in New Mexico, she graduated from high school and college in Arizona before heading north to moister climes. Liz began writing seriously when most of her seven children were grown. She has published six books and is currently working on a screenplay of her latest novel, Counting the Cost.
CRW: Welcome Liz to Writers Mirror. It is really great to interview you today.
Liz: It’s nice to be interviewed. I’ve been in awe of your energy and outreach ever since we met at a writers retreat three years ago.
CRW: Thanks Liz. I remember meeting you too, and how I was in awe at how well you had it all together. Okay, now some questions so all can get to know you better. What inspires you to write?
Liz: It’s just something I gotta do. You know, fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly.
CRW: Liz has got to write. Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Liz: If I’m in the middle of a project I try to write at least five days a week. The only goal I set is to get the dang thing done.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Liz: Family, work, inertia, life. There’s lots to get in the way, but people in my life are really supportive. They always ask if I’m busy before breaking into my day.
CRW: Wow, I'm impressed. People still think I am just playing. How do you get past it?
Liz: I don’t. I embrace it. So it might take a few extra months to get something written. The things that get in the way are important, too.
CRW: Well said. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Liz: Missing obvious mistakes in something I’ve proofread a hundred times.
CRW: Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Liz: Sitting alongside a sewage lagoon in Chewelah, Washington. I wrote After Goliath while my husband was managing a job building a wastewater treatment plant. I worked with him, part time, and the rest of the time I sat in the job shack and pounded out the manuscript.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Liz: The quickest I have written a book was four months, but I was able to work that one it full time. Since I still am employed, a more comfortable length of time is nine months.
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Liz: Everywhere. From family history, from the newspaper, from standing in line at the post office, from the things that get in the way of my writing.
CRW: The line at the Post Office. Good idea. Where do you get your character’s names?
Liz: I take a lot of my surnames from family history. If I hear a name I particularly like, I file it away—which does no good, because I can’t remember where I filed it. When it finally surfaces, I can’t remember the reason I kept it, but, hey, it’s a pretty good name, I’ll stick it on this current hero.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Liz: Diet Pepsi with fresh lime.
CRW: Tell us about your book “Counting the Cost.”
Liz: This story arc is taken from family history—a family secret, really, that my mother told me just before she died. This book is different from the other books I’ve written in a couple ways: First, my other books are lite fare. Both the mysteries and the romance are nice little puzzles, mini-vacations. They’re fluff. Counting the Cost has more substance to it. Secondly, my other books were all carefully plotted, outlined, written. Counting the Cost just welled up inside of me and poured out my fingers.
Oh, did I mention that Counting the Cost was an award finalist in USA Book News’ “National Best Books 2009” award?
CRW: Congratulations! I also saw it listed in a contest for book trailers. If any
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 12/16/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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CRW: Welcome, Tina, to Writers Mirror. It is really great to interview you today.
Tina: It's fun to have an interview, Cindy. Thanks.
CRW: No, thank you! Okay Tina, tell us what inspires you to write?
Tina: Life--writing has always been a part of me.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Tina: I do like to write daily. I'm not good at setting word-count goals though--I spend all of my time checking to see how many words I've written.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Tina: My family--but that's a good thing. If it weren't for them I'd probably stay sequestered in my writing room and never see the light of day.
CRW: How do you get past, through or around it and still make your writing happen?
Tina: When I don't have time to sit down to write, such as during the holidays, I am still thinking of my current WIP. I stop and make notes of ideas that come to me so that when I do have time, I have more to go from.
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Tina: Trying to get published. I've been trying to get an agent for a year now.
CRW: Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Tina: From bed. I keep a notebook, a pen, and a flashlight by my bed. On a good night I have to force myself to sleep.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Tina: I wrote the rough draft for my 230 page fairy novel in four months. My main character had a lot to say and I had to work hard to keep up with her.
CRW: By the way, Tina placed in a First Chapter Contest with this very fairy novel. I love fairies Tina, so am looking forward to you publishing this book. I always love when an author listens to the character. Others probably think we are crazy, but they really do talk.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Tina: All over. When I wrote my fairy novel--she told me her name.
CRW: There's that talking character again. What is your favorite writing food?
Tina: I don't generally eat while writing--it takes my consentration away from my goal.
CRW: Good habit. Chocolate tends to inspire me. Tina, please tell us about your book(s).”
Tina: I have self-published a children's picture book. It's a tale about a coyote who has a dream--how he saves the day and also makes his dream come true. My sister-in-law, an accomplished artist, did the illustrations.
CRW: Who did you use to publish it?
Tina: I self published through Instantpublisher.com
CRW: Please give us your best “Elevator Pitch�
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 12/8/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Valerie J. Steimle is not your average person. She was born into a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York, converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints when she was nine. She graduated from Ricks College in '79 and then attended Brigham Young University. She then went on to marry Robert Steimle at 21 and then had nine children. She has homeschooled all of her children with Robert during sometime in their life and also started writing for newspapers about family issues. She became a widow in 2006 as Robert passed away suddenly in his sleep after being married for 25 years.
CRW: Welcome, Valerie, to Writers Wednesday on Writers Mirror.
Valerie: Thank you so much for interviewing me. I love talking about my books.
CRW: Let’s start with your book called "Of One Heart: Being Single in the LDS World." When will it be available?
Valerie: It is available now on Amazon.com.
CRW: Who’s your publisher?
Valerie: They are called Createspace.com. It is a self-publishing company put out and run by Amazon.com.
CRW: Please give us your best “Elevator Pitch” for the book.
Valerie: Being single in a predominately married LDS world has great challenges. My book will help anyone who is single or knows a single friend to overcome these challenges.
CRW: How do we find your book on Amazon.com?
Valerie: Type my name Valerie J. Steimle on Amazon.com and three books will come up. You can also go to my website, http://www.strengthenyourhome.com/.
CRW: Excellent. What are the titles of your other two books?
Valerie: "Home Is Where the Heart Is" and "Home Is Where the Learning Is.: Homeschool Lifestyles from Homeschool Moms."
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Valerie: I started writing when there was an injustice occuring where I was living in San Diego. I see injustices all the time in family and social issues in our culture all the time, so I feel compelled to write about them. It's very theraputic.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Valerie: Yes, I do try to write daily but I don't set a word goal. I work on different manuscripts and ideas I have for several hours a day. Word counts can put too much pressure on me and I get writer's block so I set my writing time to 2 to 3 hours a day.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Valerie: That's a good question. Life itself. Children, new husband, my responsibilities at church and homeschooling. There is a lot going on.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Valerie: I take my down time at the computer. I finally have an office in my home so I can close the door and write for a while.
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Valerie: I love, love, love the publishing world. It is fascinating to me. I love that people will read my books and tell me it helped them in some way or they enjoyed what I had to say. It is so satisfying.
CRW: So this is crazy good then, not crazy bad. Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Valerie: When I have to watch soccer games, wait at the doctor's
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 12/2/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Tanya Parker Mills grew up overseas, and the stories she writes inevitably reflect the clashes of culture, religion, and values that her LDS family witnessed, first-hand. Her first novel, "The Reckoning," (set in Baghdad, Iraq, where she lived for five years as a child) was a 2008 Whitney Finalist in two categories and won the Indie Book Award for Multicultural Fiction. She lives and writes in Richland, Washington, sustained by her husband, two children, two cats, and a continual supply of M&M's.
CRW: Writers Mirror welcomes Tanya Parker Mills as our special guest on Wednesday's Writer.
Tanya: Hi Cindy.
CRW: Hi Tanya, I know you have an interesting and vairied background that gives you much to draw from for your writing. Please tell us about it so we can begin to get to know you.
Tanya: Shortly after my parents got married, my Dad had a choice: go to work for this new broadcasting company called NBC...or work for the government's newest agency--the CIA. Guess which acronym he went for? Of course, I didn't find out about his undercover work 'till I was getting ready to go off to BYU. It certainly lent a new perspective to our years abroad in Greece, Turkey, and Iraq! (By the time we went to Lebanon, where I finished high school, he had left the agency and gone "legitimate," as they say.)
CRW: Wow! What stories your Dad could tell, that is if he was allowed to tell them. No wonder you have so much to write about. What inspires you to write?
Tanya: Knowledge. Ever since I was a kid, I loved reading encyclopedias and you can get a ton of ideas for stories simply by reading history and biography. I find that when I come across an interesting fact or piece of history, I simply have to start writing about it in some way, in order to better understand and remember it. (It was also my best method for studying in school.)
CRW: You must have been a great student with such interesting study methods. Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Tanya: Yes, except on Sundays...but even on Sundays, I try to post to my blog. I try and write from 9 am to 11 am (except on Wednesdays when we go to the temple...then I write from 11 am to noon), when my mind is freshest. I shoot for 3-5 pages, but don't always make it.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Tanya: Not my husband. He knows not to bother me during those hours. Now our cat, Peach, is a different matter (He's high maintenance, unlike our other cat, Anastasia). I'll be in the middle of a really good scene and he'll come and jump up and park himself right in front of the monitor.
CRW: Looks like he got caught here in this picture, but that he really doesn't care. So much like all the cats I know. So what do you do with the feline situta
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 11/23/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Even though Micah has told his sister the rustic structure in the middle of town is simply part of the town's decorations, Annie is sure that unseen angels are building the crude stable--which means baby Jesus is coming, and He can make her better. Terrified that his little sister might die, Micah vows to find the baby Jesus for Annie, even if it is only a plastic doll. But as Micah gets nearer to his goal he finds that angels are closer than he ever would have believed.
The blurb sounded interesting. I thumbed through the 100 page book published by Covenant Communications and thought it looked like a nice clean read. What I didn't count on was getting so involved in the story that I forgot to focus on reviewing the book. I just enjoyed it. I won't spoil the ending, but I did find the book page turning and my eyes moist.
Kathi has a clear writing voice. Her characters are strong and most of them quite likable. I have always tried to out think the author as I read. I usually figure out 'who done it' by about half way through a book. This time I didn't figure it out until about three quarters of the way. The only thing that seemed a bit out of whack was that several times Micah drew very adult conclusions and I had to double check that it was Micah saying or thinking these thoughts. Overall the entire book is a masterpiece in creating human emotions in both the characters and the reader.
The responsibly Micah feels toward his mother and sister is touching. His character shines through and shows that Micah is a good kid deep inside. The feeling extended beyond the book to include most youth. It is a comforting message that we have some wonderful young people in this troubled world.
The town sounds like a great place to live and has a good variety and flavor of people. Kathi allows her characters to achieve a good growth arch. She includes just enough physical and character hints that each of them come alive. They become real people, people
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 11/18/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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CRW: Welcome Connie, what inspires you to write?
Connie: I sometimes notice little things that trigger a scene for me. For instance, the other day in the grocery store there was a man with his little boy (about 5). The little boy looked up at his Daddy with an expression of pure hero worship and his father returned with a look I can only describe as gentle love. In my mind I imagined them as a divorced father who missed his time with his boy and took full advantage of his visitation rights. Since I am divorced and do not see a good relationship between my sons and their father, this really struck me as sweet and noteworthy. I’d love to write something that would inspire father’s everywhere to appreciate their children and to live so that their children could always look up to them with that same worshipful expression.
CRW: Do you set time or word goals daily for your writing?
Connie: I don’t do very well at setting a daily word goal. I tend to write by scenes, not words. When I have a scene fixed in my mind, I like to sit down, close my eyes, and just let it pour out my fingertips onto the keyboard. It isn’t unusual to come to the end of the scene and realize that I have tears running down my cheeks.
CRW: I beleive that if the writer cries as she writes it, then the emotions are so honest that the reader will too. What gets in your way of writing?
Connie: It would almost be easier to say what doesn’t get in my way of writing. Life happens. I can always find something else that needs done before I sit to write and before you know it, my day is gone. Perhaps my biggest stumbling block is emotional energy. Especially if I am working on an intense scene, it tends to drain me emotionally. If I am under a great deal of stress for the day, I find it very difficult to find the energy to write.
Recently, I find that I resist being scheduled. As of three months ago, for the first time in my life, there is no one calling the shots for me; no parents, child, husband or boss. I have been wallowing in that luxurious feeling like a pig in the mud. My time is my own to do with as I choose and it has been a heady feeling. I got a little unrealistic with it for a while, but am getting things back into perspective now.
CRW: Tell us a little more about how you are coming to terms with making time for writing?
Connie: It took a while to identify some of the problems, but I am doing my best to negate them. While there is always something that needs doing in the housework department, I have identified the things that drive me crazy if undone. Since my best writing time is early in the day, I am making it a policy not go to bed at night until those things are done so they don’t take control of the next day and my wrighting time. I also try to schedule other responsibilities and appointments for later in the day so it keeps my mornings more free to write. I limit myself in the time I spend with e-mails, blogs, etc. Reading was a distraction for me. Once I start a book, I hate to put it down. So, since I like to read as I eat, for breakfast I limit my reading to an Ensign article or a Relief Society lesson. To read for fun is becoming a reward for
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 11/11/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Donna Hatch writes clean romances known as "Sweet Romances." Writer's Mirror applauds Donna for her stance on keeping high standards in writing.
CRW: Thanks for being with us here on Writers Mirror today as our Wednesdy Writer Donna. What inspires you to write?
Donna: Anything might. A story I read that I wish had gone a different direction. Wondering about a secondary character in a book or movie. A song. Sometimes I just get a scene in my head, like watching a scene in a movie, and I build the rest of the story around it.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Donna: Word count doesn't work for me because sometimes I need time to chose just the right word or phrase. Instead, I try to write for at least two hours daily. It used to be longer, but now that I'm juggling three part time jobs, plus being a mommy, it's cut into my writing time. I write more when I'm suffering from insomnia.
CRW: In a nutshell, what gets in your way of writing?
Donna: Life. Kids. Self doubt.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Donna: Usually because I can't NOT write. Or sometimes I just make myself sit down and write something. Anything. Even if I'm sure I'll cut it later. Some of the biggest bursts of brilliance have occurred when I was sure I was writing utter trash, which most of it was, but there was often a jewel in there that I salvaged which changed the course of the story or the basic element of a character.
CRW: Intersting. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Donna: Self doubt. My interal editor. Critique partners, sometimes, when they don't "get" what I'm writing.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Donna: I can usually write the first draft anywhere from 3 weeks to 2 months. But I spend 4 months or more polishing it depending on how many interruptions I have. Novellas go much faster. I wrote both of my novellas in just a few days.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Donna: Nothing clever. Sometimes they come pre-named. Other times I rename them several times until I get just the right one. The character doesn't become 3 dimentional until I chose the right one. I stick to names that were used in Regency England or that were Norman Conquest names to help create that believable Regency feel.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Donna: I don't eat while I write unless my stomach wakes me up out of my writing coma. And then I'm so starved that I want whatever I can get my hands on fastest.
CRW: I love that you get into a "Writing Coma" or zone. Okay Donna, here's the million dollar quesion. Why are you a writer?
Donna: I am. Therefore I write. It certainly isn't for the glory or the money, since obviously I have neither of those.
CRW: Keep it up, you will! W
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 11/4/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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CRW: Welcome Rachel Rager, to Writers Mirror, Writers Wednesday. Please introduce yourself to us.
Rachel: I’m the mother of three beautiful young girls. My husband and I have been married for eight and half years. I love to sing and have a degree in vocal performance for opera. I published By Love or By Sea in April 2009 but have seven stories that are complete and five works in progress! I love to read any good, clean romance book, ride my bike, go on picnics with my family, write, sing and bake! (Not usually at the same time, of course!)
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Rachel: I get inspiration all over the place. One day I wrote a character based on a young man I saw driving a truck through an intersection! I have notebooks everywhere so I can write down things whenever the thought strikes me. I also often find inspiration while on road trips.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Rachel: No. That takes the fun out of it. I try to write every day, but I don’t set myself a time limit. I prefer to take the journey and enjoy it. If I try to fulfill something, I get stressed and I find I don’t write as well and the ideas aren’t as good. I do set some goals occasionally, such as when I’d like to finish a chapter, but I don’t do that often. I prefer to just have fun.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Racgel: Everything. As a mother of three young girls, finding time to write is challenging, especially as they get older and take fewer naps. However, my biggest speed bump is checking emails when I get a chance to sit down to the computer. I easily get distracted.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Rachel: Persistence. It’s something I continually have to work at. But I restrict myself from checking my email once in the morning and once in the evening. That seems to help. Then when I’m on the computer, I can concentrate on writing!
CRW: Please tell us about your book, "By Love or By Sea."
Rachel: Here is the blub on the back of the book. ALICE LIND FRANK never forgot the boy she loved when she was just six years old, even after he was lost at sea. Now a young woman, Alice has found happiness in living and working with her grandparents, and in the affections of Clarence Hielott, the wealthy shipyard owner who intends to make Alice his bride.
WHEN A RAGGED SAILOR appears in town, Alice is reminded of the young boy who once held her heart. Upon learning that the sailor is in fact her childhood love, Caleb, she finds herself falling for him again.
BUT CLANRENCE REFUSES to let this ghost from the past destroy his plans for the future. He exposes the secrets of Caleb’s past, and Alice realizes that the boy she once knew is now a man with a dark history. Soon Caleb and Clarence are locked in a fierce c
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/28/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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Anna del C. Dye is the author of The Silent Warrior Trilogy, a high fantasy saga loved by many. She enjoys helping other authors with reviews and with tips of how to promote their work. A native of Chile, she doesn’t let the fact that English is her second language slow down her vivid imagination. She loves everything medieval, ruins, romantic music, live plays, sewing, and camping. Most of all she loves her beloved husband who is responsible for her becoming an author. Now enter the fantasy world of Anna del C. Dye…
CRW: Welcome to Writers Mirror Anna. What inspires you to write?
Anna: What doesn’t? as my husband put it. My own life lessons and some amazing people I know.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Anna: No, since my first book was published I spend a minimum of 8 hours a day promoting my work. I write when I can.
CRW: Wow! Eight hours a day promoting. That is amazing. So I am afraid to ask my next question, but here goes anyway. What gets in your way of writing?
Anna: Promoting, it takes a lot of my time. It is a horrible monster but a very necessary one.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Anna: No quite there yet… if that’s possible? We do go camping and that helps with the writing. No internet, no door bell, no church meetings, no phone, no kids, you get the point.
CRW: Sounds like you are very dedicated and realize many of the sacrifices a writer makes. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Anna: Being interrupted by the phone or dinner when I am most inspired.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Anna: Set it to the computer from beginning to end… about three months. To have it ready for publication take about two years. Except my last one, I started nine months ago and it’s not finished yet.
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Anna: Many places. Tolkien inspired my YA Elf Series. My Princess Series, a YA medieval romance series, is inspired by many things.
After I watched the musical Aida I wrote “A Kingdom by the Sea.” After I met a young elder who looked like he was made out of gold I wrote, “The Golden Princess.” I visited Disney World in Florida a couple of times and wrote “Princess Magnolia.” They have beautiful Magnolia trees there and I chose flower names for her ladies-in-waiting.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Anna: Invent them, mostly on the spur of the moment. Many come to me with the story. I have been complimented by my fans for the names of my characters many times.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Anna: Grapes, they are easy to grab and pop into your mouth before is time for the next idea and have low calories.
CRW: Why are you a writer?
Anna: I have tooooo much imagination and my husband said I better use it in books before I drive him insane. Love the stories… and love him, too.
CRW: Glad you added the last few words. Wise woman. Who do you hope reads your work?
Anna: Teens in trouble, anyone who need a boost of self-esteem or a reason to believe in themselves.
CRW: What would be the best complement you could receive from a fan?
Anna: That my books have inspired them to change their lives for the better.
CRW: What is the topic of the project you are currently working on?
Anna: “Curse of the Elfs.” The first elf book after the trilogy is undergoing the last revisions right now. Its underlying theme is trust. It will be published next year.
CRW: Please tell us more about it.
Anna: The book starts with war threatening in the southlands and the elfs go to help mankind rid themselves of this menace. By the time they are done with the threat the elfs have lost many of their kind, including their beloved commander and his mankind wife. (It is a rare case in which an elf has chosen a mankind woman for his eternal companion.) It continues nineteen years later when the elfs discover a new threat to their race, this time more powerful than a war. They are under the spell of a dead wizard and have been dying slowly for the past twenty years. The elfs are baffled for they are great healers; notwithstanding this fact, they can’t figure out what is killing them. Once they identify the cause of the problem, they know what to do. Their only hope of a cure is in the form of a man whom they not only have to find but also know nothing about, except that he is a servant to royalties. To find him before their gentle and beautiful race disappears is their desperate quest.
CRW: Sounds fabulous. Where can our readers go to buy your books?
Anna: My website http://www.annadelc.com
Amazon.com
Barnes&noble.com
CRW: Here are three of Anna's books now available.
CRW: Thank you Anna for sharing this with us.
Anna: It was my pleasure.
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/21/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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CRW: Welcome to Writers Wednesday on Writers Mirror. What inspires you to write Heather?
Heather: Different things. Sometimes I hear something in the news, sometimes I have an odd idea in a dream--though that's never led to a salable idea yet, the idea was fun to play with anyway. Sometime I overhear things down town or at the mall. Someone says something and my brain begins to whirl. A few times I've heard a sentence and then run home to write a scene around it for one of my many, many partially finished books.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Heather: The Internet, and my voracious need to read everything in sight. Oh, and real-life things like dishes and laundry, and keeping the house sort-of presentable so when unexpected computer clients stop to drop off their machines, I don't have to keep the door opened only to a crack. Thank goodness you can't see much of the kitchen from the front room.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Heather: I've actually had my husband disable the wireless signal to my laptop a couple of times so I don't get tempted to check out someone's blog or see who has updated their Facebook status. Otherwise deadlines seem to help--my critique group is excellent for that (and so many other things) because I *have* to have a new chapter to bring each week, so I can't get too distracted. As for the housework--I just try and avoid it as much as possible. It may not go away, but hey, if I sweep the kitchen floor today, it's going to need it again soon anyway, and waiting is more efficient--right?
CRW: I like your ideas on house cleaning. I have my morning routine of everyday chores, then I do three to seven loads of wash and one extra chore or project each day. I am able to pretty much stay on top of the house, but I like your way better. Now, back to writing. Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Heather: My schedule is really irregular so I just try and work around the edges. Some days I don't have time to do more than glance at my email and others I have six hours straight to work on whatever's eating at me the most. I'm an EMT so I've learned when I take a long patient transfer I bring my laptop so I can work on the way home. The back of an empty ambulance is actually a pretty good place for me to work since there aren't any distractions.
CRW: Wow! I have to say, you take the award for the most unusual place to write. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Heather: Editing. Getting almost to the end of the book and realizing that I dropped a storyline or that I've put too much emphasis on one angle and not enough on another and so the emphasis is off. I also HATE getting critiques back from my trusted writing friends because they always find the holes in what I thought was a well-crafted story.And, they're almost always right.
I also hate when I'm working on book A and storyline E starts picking at me--I know I can't do more than make a few notes on storyline E, I have deadlines now, and I actually do have to finish mostly-written books A, B, C, and D before I can focus on E. I mean, honestly, can't they wait? The answer to that is, of course, no, so I find myself writing a scene here and there on C, D, or E when I really need to get back and finish up A.
CRW: I do the same thing. A character in one book nags at me until I write just enough to get he/she/it off my back, then get back to my main project. Heather, how long does it take you to complete a book?
Heather: That varies significantly. The very first book I ever finished only took five weeks for the first draft. Of course, it has since undergone about four major rewrites and may still never see the light of day again, but it felt good to know I could do that. I was living in a hotel while we waited for our house to finish getting built, though, so there were very few distractions. I've had some take me literally years of rewrites, but mostly now I look about five months for the first draft and two to three months of edits, interspersed with long periods between versions while others critique and I put off editing. =) Of course, if I could get the other stories to leave me alone, I could probably do that a lot faster!
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Heather: Some from life experiences, the news, talking to friends. A lot of times I start with a general plot idea, and then after I write a bit I start to try and figure out more about the main players and their lives. I call my friend Danyelle and we brain storm for hours. She comes up with primo complications later in the books when mine all start to run out.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Heather: Most of the time I go to babynames.com and scan names until I find a few I like, but I have some characters I've named after friends and family. I find I tend to use the same names over and over. A couple of years ago I was going through several nearly-finished manuscripts and realized I'd used one particular name like six times--and never was that character a particularly well-loved one. I'm really not sure how that happened since I know several people by that name, and they're all pretty nice.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Heather: I actually don't eat much when I write. I like popcorn (totally plain right from the air popper), jordan almonds, crackers, well, almost any kind of finger food. It's hard, though, to have two hands on the keyboard if you're trying to eat. Of course, if I ate a whole lot more plain popcorn, and a whole lot less of that cake I baked just so I'd have an excuse to decorate it, I'd probably be a lot better off--and so would my hips.
CRW: Why are you a writer?
Heather: How can I not write? Since I was a little girl my imagination has been one of my best friends. I read like a demon, which of course, made me a backward, socially inept youth, which led to more reading and more living in my head. About ten years ago I finally decided to put one of those stories from my brain onto paper. From there on out there was no quitting. I've taken breaks to read voraciously for months, or in some cases even watch movies like crazy while I worked on my much-neglected hobbies, but I've never been able to excise storytelling from my blood.
CRW: Who do you hope reads your work?
Heather: This first book"The Ball's in Her Court," is about a woman's journey to find her birth family, and to find herself and her own self worth in some ways. I hope that anyone who struggles with those kinds of issues will read it, or friends and family of adoptees who want to search will consider that there are many sides to every story. I seem to have a lot of themes of family and family relationships because there's nothing more important out there. And of course I love a sweet, clean romance, so I really try to deliver that as well.
CRW: What would be the best complement you could receive from a fan?
Heather: "I stayed up until 2 AM to finish it because I couldn't put it down!" That would be high praise indeed. Though, actually, I hope someday to get a compliment that will blow even that one out of contention.
CRW: Heather please tell us about your book that is coming out soon.
Heather: My first book is about a woman who was abused and neglected as a child, then put into the foster care system. Several years, and various placements later she was adopted by a family when she was twelve. The book is about her as an adult and the journey toward reunion with the birth family she never knew in order to put to rest the memories that still haunt her. And, of course, she falls in love, because it wouldn't be much of a romance without that very important angle.
CRW: Do you have another project you are currently working on?
Heather: Which one? =) Aside from "Rebound" which is being released next summer, I have third one I'm working on final edits, and a fourth one that I'm just writing the ending for--and they're all different.
I'm just finishing up a story of a woman who marries her best friend so he will be able to gain custody of his recently-orphaned niece and nephew. When his unit gets called up by the marines, she's left trying to juggle single parenthood, her career--in which strange things start to happen--and her growing love for her friend.
CRW: Sounds interesting. Please tell us more about it.
Heather: Rena is a thirty-one-year-old single woman who is past ready to settle down, but her only real option is the very pleasant man she's been dating all summer. Her non-option is her close friend Tucker--who is completely delicious (the female members of my critique group agree with me on that, so it must be true). Though Tucker is, in many ways, her ideal, their assorted romances with other people have always managed to keep them apart. Until now--when two children obliterate the careful protection they've formed around their friendship.
CRW: Great story. I look forward to it and your other books. May I list your website or blog site?
Heather: Of course! My website: http://www.heatherjustesen.com/. My catch-all blog http://www.heatherjustesen.blogspot.com/ then I recently started a new blog that I post to daily called Clean Books for LDS Families http://www.cleanbooksforldsfamilies.blogspot.com/ It has a Facebook fan page I post the blog up to also. In a world where even childrens' books are getting questionable, I thought it would be great to have a list people could trust. I've had lots of support from other writers already and look forward to seeing what it can become.
CRW: Great goals Heather. My motto is the world needs more wholesome voices. I appreciate you taking your time to visit with us here on Writers Mirror. Good luck, and keep at it!
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/14/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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CRW: What book do you have coming out soon?
Joan: "Haunts Haven", an LDS Ghost Story (Walnut Springs Press) is my first published novel. It is a romance about a young woman who inherits a hacienda inn that has been boarded up for over fifty years and the ghost who guards it. "Haunts Haven" will soon make its debut in a store near you.
CRW: Very exciting Joan! Please tell us about some of your other published works.
Joan: My short story “The Last Gift of Christmas” appeared in Covenant Communications’ 1996 book, "A Merry Little Christmas". Spring Creek published LDS Word Puzzles.
CRW: I understand you write music and offer it FREE to anyone. Is that right?
Joan: Yes, I have maintained a free LDS sheet music website for many years at:
http://joansowards.com/ that offers music for all church occasions, especially Young Women, including a song for the yearly theme.
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Joan: Any little idea. Each of my novels were sparked by one idea that someone presented—and each idea kept working on me until I had a plot. Jeni Grossman taught an ANWA writer's workshop about using newspaper photos and articles to get writing ideas, which led me to write "Haunts Haven".
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Joan: Life. There’s always something going on in the family, but now that my children are grown, I have a little more free time and I spend a lot of it writing. So often, I settle into writing and the grandkids come over, and who can resist grandkids? Not me.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Joan: Write when no one is wanting my attention.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Joan: I write daily, and sometimes I will set a word number goal if I’m trying to get something done. Writing isn’t number one, though. My family and husband get first priority.
CRW: Good for you. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Joan: Plots. I love developing plots and subplots. I stick with it until it’s done, and usually will finish one novel before beginning the next.
CRW: Wow, that is impressive. I have so mand voices, oops, I mean characters in my head that I have to write about them or I can't move on with my current project. I have nat least fifteen books going on right now. How long does it take you to complete a book?
Joan: It varies. "Haunts Haven" was written in a few months. One of my favorite novels, "We Have Seen His Star," took three months, and that was writing all day, every day. I started "Chocolate Roses" a year and a half ago and had to set it aside (an exception to sticking with it till it’s finished) because I didn’t have the story to connect the beginning with the end. After a lot of pondering, brainstorming with hubby, and prayer, I picked it up again, and it all fell together.
CRW: Where did you get your idea for "Haunts Haven"?
Joan: In Jeni Grossman’s class, she handed me an article about ghosts that haunted old southern Arizona inns. She told us to ask, “What if?” So, I wondered what would happen if an unsuspecting young woman inherited one of those haunted inns, ghost and all. Haunts Haven blossomed from there.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Joan: I choose names that I feel the character wants—and they are sometimes quirky. After Walnut Springs Press decided to publish "Haunts Haven", they asked me to change three main characters’ names. They thought they were old fashioned or too odd. So, "Haunts Haven" is now the same cast, but new names.
I recently met a woman whose name is Cricket. I asked her if her parents had given her that name, and she told me that in high school there were five other girls with her real name, and that the principle told them to each pick a nickname. That night, I went home and changed the name of a supporting character in Chocolate Roses (she had a hiccupping problem) to Cricket, and also gave her the woman’s name-change story.
CRW: Cricket, what a fun name. What is your favorite writing food?
Joan: Sorry, I don’t eat while writing. I look at taking snack breaks as the way of getting my blood moving from sitting so long. I can sit and write all day, so I have to force myself to get up and move. Food is the motivator.
CRW: Why are you a writer?
Joan: Only because I love it. I’m not a master at the English language like some of my favorite authors, but I love to tell a story, work out subplots, weave it all together in a tapestry. It is very fulfilling.
CRW: Who do you hope reads your work?
Joan: Everybody! Everyone who loves an adventure. "Haunts Haven" is set in a tiny town in southern Arizona where everybody’s business is everybody’s business, small town politics prevail, and romance still happens. I think everyone—young and old—can find something to relate to in "Haunts Haven". A reader who dreams of restoring old houses can relate to Callie inheriting an old hotel and fixing it up. Along with the inn, she inherits a ghost—and everyone loves a ghost story. And for the romantic, Callie falls for a local cowboy and is also befriended by a unmarried, attractive rancher who is willing to stand with her against the ghost.
CRW: I am going to love it. I love scheming and fixing up houses, especially old ones. And who can pass up a good clean romance? What would be the best complement you could receive from a fan?
Joan: “I can’t wait for the sequel!” or “Your stories are so fun!” How about “Please send me 30 copies to send to my friends and relatives for Christmas—I loved it that much.”
CRW: Agreed! What is the topic of the project you are currently working on?
Joan: I just finished Chocolate Roses, an LDS Jane Eyre parody.
CRW: Please tell us more about it.
Joan: Rose Whitaker co-owns a chocolate stop in Tempe, Arizona and has developed a crush on a customer who comes into her store every Tuesday morning. He never pays attention to her, but unwittingly moves into her housing complex, bringing with him his four year old daughter. Rose is pulled into their complicated lives and the story goes from there.
CRW: Sounds like another great story to look forward to. Joan, I thank you for taking the time to be interviewed and wish you great success in all your writing.
For more information on Joan please check out:
http://www.joansowards.blogspot.com/
(music) http://www.joansowards.com/
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/7/2009
Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
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(CRW is Cindy R. Williams)
CRW: Thanks Joyce for being with us here on Writers Mirror.
How many books have you written?
Joyce: Well, I've written 5 and am working on a 6th, but only two of my books are published so far.
CRW: I just happen to have cover pictures of those two published books.
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Joyce: Reading, both fiction or medieval history books, will often get me in the mood to write.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Joyce: Time restraints, but I think mostly my own insecurities and self-doubts. It's so much easier to do ANYTHING else than sit down at the computer and confront the little voice in my head that says, "You, a writer? I dare you to think of something to write today!" And the fear that it's right...I won't be able to think of something, which in my head translates into "failure!"
CRW: How do you get past it?
Joyce: The only way to get past it is to sit down and write anyway. Even if I only type out a handful of words and I hate every one of them. I just have to keep telling myself while I'm fighting through a tough writing session today, "Tomorrow will be better", and usually (not always, but usually), tomorrow is.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Joyce: No, I don't use word goals, I use time goals to keep me on track instead. I set a timer for, let's say, an hour and tell myself I can't do anything else but sit at the computer and work on my writing until the timer goes off. I can't play any computer games, I can't play on the internet (I bought a laptop that's not connected to the internet so I can do this in a completely different room of the house where email and the internet can't tempt me), I can't go get a snack, I basically can't even get out of my chair until the timer goes off. My only two choices are to stare at the computer screen for an hour or write something on my novel. Actually, that kind of takes the pressure off me a little. If I'm really struggling to write, I can tell myself, "You don't have to write, you just have to sit here in front of your computer for an hour. If you don't want to write you don't have to, but you do have to sit here and stare at this screen until the timer goes off." Usually, simple boredom will eventually drive me to write SOMETHING. It's very, very rare that I don't end up typing at least a handful of words, which is always better than no words at all!
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Joyce: Do you mean what drives me CRAZY or what makes me CRAZY to write! I just picked up a plaque at Target yesterday (which won't be yesterday by the time you post this, but you get the point) that says: "I live in my own little world, but it's OK. They know me here." I guess that kind of sums up how I feel about my writing. When my writing is really going well, it's like losing myself inside a world where I'm spending time with friends. And what can be a better feeling than spending time with friends?
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Joyce: Oh, don't ask me that! My first two (non-published) books took me 6 years each...and that was just for the rough draft! Loyalty's Web took me maybe three, and Illuminations of the Heart might have taken me two, but again, that was for a first draft. Because it took me so long to find a publisher for Loyalty's Web and Illuminations, both of the books ultimately went through many, many revisions and polishings before Leatherwood/Walnut Springs Press finally picked them up. So judging from my past track record, how long it'll take me to write my next book is anyone's guess!
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Joyce: My first book (the one I wrote way back in college) kind of came in reaction to some romances I had been reading back then. It seemed like I'd read several romances where the hero appeared to be of a lower social class than the heroine, but in the end, he turned out to be a prince or a duke or something. I thought to myself, "So what would happen if the hero turned out to be exactly what he appeared to be all through the book? Someone of a lower social strata than the heroine? How would they resolve that without resorting to 'I'm really a prince in disguise'?" Also, I'd read several romances where the hero just infuriated me. He would be totally cold and abusive (verbally, not physically) to the heroine all through the book, until the last few pages when he finally almost literally fell down at her feet in worship without any serious groundwork for the change that I could see. That hero-type made me so mad, I took him and turned him into the villain for my first book. And I made the hero a medieval minstrel, because at that age, I couldn't think of anything that could be more romantic than a medieval minstrel. :-) So I guess you could say that many of my original ideas came from trying to turn current romance themes on their heads at the time. After that, it became like Marsha described in your interview with her. I ended up creating a sort of medieval universe of characters in that first book that I've basically been playing off of ever since.
CRW: Where do you get your characters names?
Joyce: I started compiling a list of medieval names way back in college, jotting them down from medieval novels I was reading or medieval history books I was reading for my history degree in college. Then I found this WONDERFUL book called The Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names, by E.G. Withycombe. It's out of print now, so I was very lucky to pick up a copy when I did. This book traces the historical evolution of "English Christian names", and when each name came into usage in England, and where the names came from, such as France or Germany. From the information in this book, I was able to gather names that were "pre-Norman Conquest", "came over to England with the Norman Conquest", were listed in various medieval records that gave me actual dates for how early certain names were being used, etc. I typed up a list of Medieval Male and Medieval Female names from this book (and the names I'd collected previously) and this is the list I still use today for selecting names for my characters. If you're writing historical fiction and want to be sure you're using authentic names for your time period, THIS IS A FANTASTIC BOOK TO HAVE IN YOUR RESEARCH COLLECTION!!!
CRW: Maybe it is available on line.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Joyce: I don't usually eat while I'm writing. It's one of those "you can't leave this computer until the timer goes off, even to get a snack" rules of mine. But if I'm finding myself excessively low on energy or unbearably sleepy, I'll sometimes grab a handful of Hershey Kisses to suck on. (I never chew my chocolate, so I can make them last quite awhile. ;-) )
CRW: What is your viewpoint of self publishing verses being published by a publishing house?
Joyce: Self-publishing gives you the greatest degree of control over your book, but I'll be honest, I know I've sold more books by having a publisher who got my titles into a brick and mortar bookstore than I ever would through purely online selling methods. Or at least, I've sold more, faster this way. Maybe over the long run, sales might have balanced out, I can't really say. For that reason, and because I've been blessed to have an editor who is truly enthused about my books and hence is able to give a big boost to my confidence when it's sagging, finding a traditional publisher has truly been a blessing for me. But I wouldn't rule out self-publishing again, if that were the only way to publish "the story I wanted to tell".
CRW: What is the topic of your next book that has you excited?
Joyce: I'm hoping to explore the world of the medieval troubadour a bit. But as usual, I have to admit that it's the characters in a new book that excite me more than a particular topic.
CRW: Please tell us about your next book.
Joyce: It doesn't have a title yet, because I'm terrible at coming up with titles. (Except for Illuminations of the Heart. That one just kind of came to me in a flash.) Right now, I'm just calling it "my troubadour book". It's still in the very early stages, and since I don't outline, it's hard to tell you where it's going to end up right now. But it's set a year after Illuminations of the Heart, and while Illuminations and Loyalty's Web both "played" a little with the historical character of Duke Richard of Aquitaine, the second son of Henry II, I'm hoping to use this book to "play" with the character of Duke Richard's brother, Henry the Younger, Henry II's eldest son and heir to the throne. Gunthar and Hel鮥 from Loyalty's Web have already made appearances and will have important parts to play in my new book (though the book isn't "about them" directly). My hero is a character from Illuminations of the Heart, and the heroine has ties to Loyalty's Web, although she wasn't actually in that book, but I'm not giving away how she's linked to it. ;-) Somebody has a grudge and is using a secret talent of my heroine's to achieve some vengeance. My heroine isn't completely ignorant of this and actually has some sympathy for her manipulator's cause. But when the "act of vengeance" comes, everything goes horribly wrong. (After all, what kind of story would it be if everything didn't go horribly wrong?) Can my hero sort everything out in time to save my heroine from herself? Or that's kind of the hazy plot I have in my head just now. There's no telling, though, how the story will actually play out in the end. You know, just recently I came across my original "outline" for Illuminations of the Heart. It's the only book I ever tried to outline before I wrote it. It bears absolutely no resemblance to the way Illuminations actually turned out. Someday I'm going to post that outline on my blog, just to give everyone who's read Illuminations of the Heart a really good laugh!
CRW: Thanks, Joyce, for sharing this information about yourself and your writing. I have read both of your published books and highly recommend them. I look forward to your next book.
To read more about Joyce, here is her contact information.
http://www.joyce-dipastena.com/
http://jdp-news.blogspot.com/
http://medievalresearch.blogspot.com/
http://medievalvignettes.blogspot.com/
http://anwafounder.blogspot.com/
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/5/2009
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Join us creating a story together.
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/5/2009
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By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/4/2009
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Laughter and music floated up the grand staircase to where Princess Maranda clung to the marble hand rail. She knew her identity was safe behind her diamond studded feathered mask, but this did little to calm her nerves. She had overheard her mother, the Queen, speaking to several Ladies in Waiting about the appearance of the new Duke. His father had passed several years ago, and his son and heir had arrived just last week to accept his title and the many properties that it entailed including the "Haunted North Eden Castle." He was said to be a most handsome, scoundral, just like his father.
The music stopped. She knew it was time to assend. She took a deep calming breath and . . .
Friday, October 2, 2009 Joyce DiPastena said...
She heard an odd rustling nearby. A breeze accompanied it, brushing gently across her cheeks.
"Beware," a voice murmured, so softly she was sure she only imagined it. Until it came again, with a fluttering sensation against her ear.
"Beware."
Instinctively, she raised a hand to brush away the tickle.
"Beware...and do you mind? You've set my feathers all askew. Would you please smooth them out again for me?"
"Feathers? What..."
"Beware."
Princess Maranda nearly jumped out of her luscious silk gown. Her mask! It was the mask that was whispering in her ear!
Saturday, October 03, 2009 6:36:00 PM Cindy R. Williams said...
She gathered her wits and smoothed the feathers.
"There, does that feel better?"
"Does what feel better, lovely lady? I assume you are talking to me since I see no one else around."
Princess Maranda gasped as she looked up into the most brilliant blue eyes she had ever seen. It almost looked like they were twinkling at her with laughter. A midnight blue mask surounded those heart stopping eyes. The gentlman they belonged to was at least a head taller than her, and he smelled of fresh air and waterfalls.
"Excue me sir, are you speaking to me?" She asked, her voice quite breathless.
He continued to hold her gaze and replied . . .
By: Cindy R. Williams,
on 10/3/2009
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THE QUERY LETTER IS DONE!
What's a query letter you say? It's a letter that is meant to convince an editor that your story is the greatest story ever told and that they absolutely have to have it even more than chocolate. A query letter is your proposal of sorts, your calling card, you’re desperate plea to "PICK ME! PICK ME!" without sounding the least bit whiny or desperate.
I have been flying on Sparkin the dragon's noble back over Arizona for three years now and yet found the query letter about as much work. Wait a minute, hold the phone, and your horses or whatever it is you hold. I actually found the book an absolute delight to write. I love the characters, even the sinister ones and many times had to be called back to this planet to fix dinner, and attend to the worldly needs of my wonderful family. The query letter was more of a tear out your hair exercise that lasted through several months of research and 42 --not a typo --different versions, one to please each query letter expert. I studied the blurbs on the back of a gazillion books, and finally had an epiphany. Why not complete the exercise outlined by one of my most favorite agents that I was blessed to attend her presentation last April at the LDStorymakers Writers Conference?
So after the "why did it take you so long to figure it out?" moment, I finally hit upon what the heart of this book is about and what makes it unique. I realized it is a story of youth learning that they can do hard things, and learning that it is okay to be yourself even if you are different than others.
As Sparkin of the amazerful Stoneloch Dragon Clan would say, "It is ever so sweet" to have it complete.
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Welcome to our second annual “Summer Treasure Hunt: Dig for Clues and Win” Contest! My author friend, Joyce DiPastena, organized this SUPER SUMMER contest again this year. A prize is given away everyday from June 1 through Juloy 8th. We have something for everyone: romance, fantasy, mystery, suspense, historical, contemporaries, young adult and middle grade fiction; children’s picture books including Cindy R. Williams' Award Winning "Chase McKay Didn't Get Up Today." (Hey, isn't she the the blogger behind the curtain here?) Also a variety of non-fiction titles. We also have some exciting non-book prizes: a hand crocheted book tote and cell phone case; a book/jewelry combo; a Mary Kay cosmetic assortment; a The Lion, the Witch, and The Wardrobe DVD; and (you aspiring writers won’t want to miss this one!) a free edit/critique for the first 50 pages of an unpublished novel by a three-time published author!
SUMMER TREASURE HUNT RULES:
You can send in an entry for each day’s prize, or only for those prizes that strike your fancy. The rules are simple:
(1) Go to the website or blog indicated for each day, find the answer to the question for that day, then EMAIL THE ANSWER WITH YOUR NAME AND MAILING ADDRESS to [email protected]. I promise you will not wind up on any mailing lists. This is only to facilitate the receipt of your prize. All entries will be deleted at the end of the contest.
(2) Please send a separate entry for each day and type the day you are entering in the subject line. (Such as: Summer Treasure Hunt, June 1; Summer Treasure Hunt, June 2, etc).
(3) Deadline for each day: Midnight PST
(4) The winner will be contacted and announced on the day following the deadline.
All winners will be “drawn” by http://www.random.org/.
You do not have to wait until the designated day to enter. You can start sending in your entries right now, or begin entering at any point along the way. And check back here each day between June 2nd-July 9th to read the names of the winners.
If you have any questions, feel free to email Joyce DiPastena at [email protected]
And now…let the Treasure Hunt begin!
JUNE 1SPONSOR: Donna Hatch
PRIZE: QUEEN IN EXILE, (fantasy romance), autographed by author
QUESTION: The princess must rely upon her magic to save whom? (Hint: Look under “Bookshelf” tab)
WEBSITE/BLOG: http://www.donnahatch.net/
OPEN TO INTERNATIONAL ENTRIES
WINNER:
ANSWER:
JUNE 2
SPONSOR: Laurie Lewis
PRIZE: AWAKENING AVERY (women's fiction), autographed copy
QUESTION: Avery's signal that she isn't handling her husband's death very well comes to her when she tosses what into what? (Hint: Look under books & reviews, then click on the cover to AWAKENING AVERY and read the first chapter)
WEBSITE/BLOG: http://www.laurielclewis.com/
USA ENTRIES ONLY
WINNER:
ANSWER:
JUNE 3
SPONSOR: E.A. West
PRIZE: RILEY'S MISSION (PDF: romantic suspense)
QUESTION: Where does Jade sit aft
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SUMMER IN PARIS by Michele Ashman Bell
"I declared bankruptcy this morning. We've lost everything." Kenzie's father took a breath and continued. "We have thirty days to auction off our belongings and move out of the house."
Kenzie's mouth dropped open with disbelief. "Bankrupt," she whispered. That one word had the power to reduce her life from chauffeurs and credit cards to nothing.
"While we sort this out," her father continued, "we've made arrangements for you to stay with your aunt and uncle in Paris."
Paris. That wouldn't be so bad.
But wait . . . her uncle didn't live in Europe. He lived in Idaho.
Reading this blurb on the back of the book had me thinking two things. This Kenzie is a spoiled brat, and the book is going to be full of situations that will humble her to the point of becoming a nice and likable person.
I was right on both accounts. The personal growth arc that Bell creates for her main character is well done.
At first I had little sympathy for Kenzie. I felt like saying, "Oh waaaahh." Kenzie just seemed like a girl with a silver spoon and the world owes her a living mentality. Bell soon changed that image by giving glimpses into Kenzie that proved that she really was a nice kid with bad things happening to her. Bell dug deep into the character and created a well rounded young lady that rose to the occasion. My respect grew for the socialite as the story progressed.
One of my favorite characters was Rambo, aka Adam. He is about as perfect as a guy can be even though he has been kicked out of the social stratosphere for a horrible crime he was accused of, but not convicted. He brought a breath of fresh air into the town, and the story. He also seemed to bring the best out in Kenzie.
Bell fleshes out the surrounding characters by creating firm images complete with, mannerisms, and personalities.
Kenzie was given the farm chore of gathering eggs from the hens. Bell did a great job making it seem real and added humor to the situation. Readers will experience it right along with Kenzie.
I got a little confused when Kenzie turned her nose up at oatmeal for breakfast because of her strict diet as a ballerina, yet ate shakes and french fries without batting an eye. I chocked it up to the fact that she must be allowing herself the full experience of living a new and different life.
"Summer in Paris" is a fun read about coming of age and a little romance twisted throughout. Bell throws in a good mystery to keep you turning the pages. I recommend the book to read while lounging on a hammock in Paris, Idaho o
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The day Stephanie Roberts met Jared Wakefield, she didn't realize they had met before. Running from an abusive marriage and trying to safeguard her children, Stephanie turns to Jared for support--but he needs more from her than she might be capable of giving. With her abusive husband looming in her past, the difficulties they must overcome seem insurmountable.
Is it possible for love to conquer all? "I'll Know You By Heart" is a timeless romance that explores the possibility that relationships span the entire realm of eternity---a story about abuse, hardship, and betrayal---ultimately a story about the healing power of everlasting true love.
So far so good. I love a good story, and a good romance at that. I knew from the very first page that I was in for a bit of a rough ride following Stephanie as she dealt with and faces her horrific trials. Kimberly Job doesn't hold back on the reality of the pain, suffering and fear that accompany abuse by a spouse. She also fills the reader with hope, and comfort as she takes them on a journey of discovery, strength, honesty, and healing.
In the story, Stephanie has three children and lives in constant fear from her husband's violent temper. She puts up with it for years, convincing herself that it's really her own fault and that if she could only be better, or prettier, or perfect, etc., he would not treat her this way. It was a harrowing look inside what a battered woman deals with. Job is spot on in when she writes the scene where Stephanie grows a back bone; when the abuse spills over to her sixteen year old son. I was with her, urging her along as I read. This can't continue. She MUST take responsibility and not allow her children to be abused. Job writes with such clarity, insight and honesty that the characters become real, their pain and suffering flows out of the pages and into your heart.
This novel is not all about the anguish and tragedy of abuse, but also one of great hope, healing and growth. Job brings the story to life and takes the reader on quite an emotional ride. One cannot help but be changed after reading this book. Stephanie comes full circle when her Spirit is no longer surrounded by constant fear. She is able to recognize those inner whisperings and follow her heart. The reader is able to come to grasp with our eternal nature along with Stephanie in the story.
Job has created a masterpiece of hope. "I'll Know You By Heart" is a must read.
To purchase your own copy of "I'll Know You By Heart"
by Valor Publishing Group LLC., click here.
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"The Thorn" by Daron D. Fraley is a new release by Valor Publishing Group, LLC. Writers Mirror has been invited to participate in the book blog review tour. Let's start with the captivating blurb on the back.
Three tribes are at war on the planet Gan, unaware that the sing of Christ's birth on an unknown word--Earth--is about to appear in the heavens.
During a bloody skirmish with Gideonite troops, Jonathan of Daniel spares Pekah, a young enemy soldier, gaining his trust forever. These two distant brothers from estranged tribes covenant with each other to end the war being waged by a self-proclaimed emperor, and soon discover the intentions of a far more dangerous foe--a sinister general bent on ruling those he can bring into subjection and destroying all others.
I must admit my curiosity was piqued by this mixture of history and religious beliefs being tied together and viewed through the eyes of people living on another planet. I'm not a big fan of war books and movies, but started reading with hopes of a good tale. I was not disappointed. Farley weaves an interesting story of three very different groups of people dealing with intrigue, power, murder, romance, obedience, faith, trust and forgiveness.
The names of the characters are excellent and in keeping with the story. The battle strategies were mapped out with finesse. Farley seems to know how to stage a war. The weapons he described lent themselves well to the story. The Thorn was quite unusual, and an interesting object in itself. The sword Jonathan used was particularly fascinating. The stones that glowed with light when they rubbed them were another creative touch.
The two sister suns, Aqua and Azure, were mentioned by name often throughout the book which leads one to believe they play some significant part yet to be revealed. There was quite a lot of sniffling and teary or blurry eyes by grown men and hardened soldiers and I'm not sure about carpet on another world 2000 years ago.
Spoiler Alert: The anointing of the King and the two marriages were lumped together in one event which seemed a little anti-climactic and a bit rushed since each event was a big deal.
Included in the book is a preview of chapter one of the next book which contains a disturbing hook. As an advocate for the sanctity of one's person, and particularly my daughters, I was upset to leave the new situation unresolved, but isn't that what a good hook does? I'll have to read book two and hope there is some kind of justice.
Farley takes us on a journey back in time and gives a good look into what might have been in a universe far away. He certainly makes the possibility come alive in his novel.
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Author Ronda Gibb Hinrichsen
CRW: Welcome, Ronda, to Writers Mirror. It is a pleasure to have you be the Wednesday Writer today on Writers Mirror.
Ronda: Thanks, Cindy. I’ve been looking forward to this moment.
CRW: Please tell us when you first began to write?
Ronda: I’ve been “writing” since the 6th grade, but my first published article came out in a 1994 magazine.
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Ronda: The hunger to write, no matter what. But I also have a strong desire to write books that “lift” my readers. Too few people realize how important their goodness is to this world.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Ronda: I try to write 5-6 days a week. I usually try to write as much as I can within the time I have. Sometimes that time involves research and planning, so it’s hard to plan a number of words. Not an excuse, I promise. Just the way it is for me at this point in my career.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Ronda: Any and all other responsibilities. Honestly, the desire to write is so strong in me that I have to make myself do other things. I do better, however, if my schedule allows me to write in the morning. That way I don’t feel as guilty the rest of the day about not writing.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Ronda: If I’m having a crazy busy day, then I try to AT LEAST write down ideas or even a sentence or two on my WIP.
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing? Both crazy good and crazy bad.
Ronda: By crazy do you mean obsessed? I think I am a bit obsessed about writing which brings the good and bad that goes with that “condition.” But you know, it wasn’t until “MISSING” came out and I began
to have overwhelmed moments piled on top of overwhelmed moments (mostly related to promotion) that I actually thought “Why am I doing this?” The thought didn’t last long, though.
CRW: Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Ronda: My husband’s apartment in China. I don’t consider my car during my kids’ soccer practices as weird, because I think that kind of thing is becoming the norm among mom-writers.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Ronda: “MISSING” took 3 years because it was my first and I had a huge learning curve. I also extensively rewrote it three or more times. “TRAPPED” too
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Nichole Giles was born in Nevada, raised in Arizona, and graduated high school in Utah. Her early career plans included becoming a megastar actress or rock star, but she decided instead to have a family and then become a writer, in that order. Writing is her passion, but she also loves to spend time with her family, travel, drive in the rain with the convertible top down, and play music at full volume so she can sing along.
CRW: Welcome, Nichole, to Writers Mirror. It is really great to interview you today. Where do you usually do most of your writing?
Nichole: We have a den, but my kids have taken over the computer in there, so I usually opt to hide out in my bedroom with a laptop. It works for me.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words or a certain amount of time?
Nichole: You know, I have four kids, including teenagers, so while I do write every day, that writing isn't always on a work in progress. Some days I'm happy to clean out my inbox and write blogs. But I try to make some kind of progress every day, and as long as I do that, I feel like I'm moving forward.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Nichole: My kids, our schedule, the other parts of life like laundry and making dinner. But I will say that I often give up sleep in order to find a few minutes for writing.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Nichole: Sometimes, I don't sleep. Other times, I write on a notebook while I'm on the go. One of these days I hope to hire a housekeeper to take care of my house while I write--but until then, I take things one day at a time.
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Nichole: Crazy as in I love it or crazy as in drives me nuts?
CRW: You choose.
Nichole: I love writing because it's a great channel for emotions, and because I get to live in another world for a little while every day. But it sometimes drives me crazy when I have characters having conversations in my head while I'm trying to concentrate on other things.
CRW: Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Nichole: I've been known to edit at half time during soccer games, and have also worked on things in airports and on planes.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Nichole: It depends on the book. I work on several projects at a time, and usually an entire book takes me between a year and two years to complete and edit. But I'm talking from conception to conclusion and everything in between.
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Nichole: From everything in life. Look around! The world is full of ideas.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Nichole: Some of them come to me already named. But when they don't, I have a huge character naming book that I pour through until I've found just the right names.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Nichole: It depends on the day. Sometimes it's chocolate, but sometimes black licorice.
CRW: Tell us about your books.
Nichole: Mormon Mishaps and Mischief is an anthology of 200 short stories about the silly things people do in and around church meetings and activities. It's available everywhere LDS Books are sold.
The Sharp Edge of a Knife is based on the true story of my grandpa, who was kidnapped in 1958 by two convicts on the run. The men
CRW: Welcome, Nichole, to Writers Mirror. It is really great to interview you today. Where do you usually do most of your writing?
Nichole: We have a den, but my kids have taken over the computer in there, so I usually opt to hide out in my bedroom with a laptop. It works for me.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words or a certain amount of time?
Nichole: You know, I have four kids, including teenagers, so while I do write every day, that writing isn't always on a work in progress. Some days I'm happy to clean out my inbox and write blogs. But I try to make some kind of progress every day, and as long as I do that, I feel like I'm moving forward.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Nichole: My kids, our schedule, the other parts of life like laundry and making dinner. But I will say that I often give up sleep in order to find a few minutes for writing.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Nichole: Sometimes, I don't sleep. Other times, I write on a notebook while I'm on the go. One of these days I hope to hire a housekeeper to take care of my house while I write--but until then, I take things one day at a time.
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Nichole: Crazy as in I love it or crazy as in drives me nuts?
CRW: You choose.
Nichole: I love writing because it's a great channel for emotions, and because I get to live in another world for a little while every day. But it sometimes drives me crazy when I have characters having conversations in my head while I'm trying to concentrate on other things.
CRW: Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Nichole: I've been known to edit at half time during soccer games, and have also worked on things in airports and on planes.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Nichole: It depends on the book. I work on several projects at a time, and usually an entire book takes me between a year and two years to complete and edit. But I'm talking from conception to conclusion and everything in between.
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Nichole: From everything in life. Look around! The world is full of ideas.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Nichole: Some of them come to me already named. But when they don't, I have a huge character naming book that I pour through until I've found just the right names.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Nichole: It depends on the day. Sometimes it's chocolate, but sometimes black licorice.
CRW: Tell us about your books.
Nichole: Mormon Mishaps and Mischief is an anthology of 200 short stories about the silly things people do in and around church meetings and activities. It's available everywhere LDS Books are sold.
The Sharp Edge of a Knife is based on the true story of my grandpa, who was kidnapped in 1958 by two convicts on the run. The men
7 Comments on Wednesday Writer - Author Nichole Giles, last added: 4/1/2010
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If you are ready to take your writing serious, you won't want to miss the ANWA Writer's Conference. It is one of the best in the west, with some very big names in the business and the cost is about a third of most other writer's conferences.
Open to all writers on this or any other planet
The 2010 ANWA Writers Conference
Saturday, February 27, 2010 8:00 AM - 5:00 PM
Dobson Ranch Inn,
1666 South Dobson Road
Mesa, Arizona 85202-5699
Register at http://anwa-lds.com/conference.html
Discounted Hotel reservations available on the above registration site or by calling Dobson Inn Ranch Directly at 480-831-7000 or 1-800-528-1356 www.dobsonranchinn.com
Keynote Speaker is the successful author of the "Farworld" Series J. Scott Savage
Also Presenting:
Aprilynne Pike, New York Times best-selling Author of “Wings”
Doug Johnston, Publicist Extraordinaire
Nancy E. Turner, Author of “These is My Words”
Dr. Pamela Goodfellow, Writing Coach, Editor and Owner of Goodfellow Publishing Services
Sara Fujimura, Author and Magazine Writer
Helen Bair, Counselor and Author of “Finding the Healer in Me”
Arizona’s very own illustrious Marsha Ward, author of the “Owen Family” Series and experienced in e-book publications
Book signings at end of conference
For questions contact, the ANWA 2010 Conference Chair Person, Cindy R. Williams at [email protected] or Conference Registrar, Krista Darrach at
1 Comments on Wednesday Writer ~ ANWA Writer's Conference, last added: 12/31/2009
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Liz Adair, author of Counting the Cost
Though Liz Adair lives in the Pacific Northwest, she has desert in her DNA. Born in New Mexico, she graduated from high school and college in Arizona before heading north to moister climes. Liz began writing seriously when most of her seven children were grown. She has published six books and is currently working on a screenplay of her latest novel, Counting the Cost.
CRW: Welcome Liz to Writers Mirror. It is really great to interview you today.
Liz: It’s nice to be interviewed. I’ve been in awe of your energy and outreach ever since we met at a writers retreat three years ago.
CRW: Thanks Liz. I remember meeting you too, and how I was in awe at how well you had it all together. Okay, now some questions so all can get to know you better. What inspires you to write?
Liz: It’s just something I gotta do. You know, fish gotta swim, birds gotta fly.
CRW: Liz has got to write. Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Liz: If I’m in the middle of a project I try to write at least five days a week. The only goal I set is to get the dang thing done.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Liz: Family, work, inertia, life. There’s lots to get in the way, but people in my life are really supportive. They always ask if I’m busy before breaking into my day.
CRW: Wow, I'm impressed. People still think I am just playing. How do you get past it?
Liz: I don’t. I embrace it. So it might take a few extra months to get something written. The things that get in the way are important, too.
CRW: Well said. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Liz: Missing obvious mistakes in something I’ve proofread a hundred times.
CRW: Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Liz: Sitting alongside a sewage lagoon in Chewelah, Washington. I wrote After Goliath while my husband was managing a job building a wastewater treatment plant. I worked with him, part time, and the rest of the time I sat in the job shack and pounded out the manuscript.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Liz: The quickest I have written a book was four months, but I was able to work that one it full time. Since I still am employed, a more comfortable length of time is nine months.
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Liz: Everywhere. From family history, from the newspaper, from standing in line at the post office, from the things that get in the way of my writing.
CRW: The line at the Post Office. Good idea. Where do you get your character’s names?
Liz: I take a lot of my surnames from family history. If I hear a name I particularly like, I file it away—which does no good, because I can’t remember where I filed it. When it finally surfaces, I can’t remember the reason I kept it, but, hey, it’s a pretty good name, I’ll stick it on this current hero.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Liz: Diet Pepsi with fresh lime.
CRW: Tell us about your book “Counting the Cost.”
Liz: This story arc is taken from family history—a family secret, really, that my mother told me just before she died. This book is different from the other books I’ve written in a couple ways: First, my other books are lite fare. Both the mysteries and the romance are nice little puzzles, mini-vacations. They’re fluff. Counting the Cost has more substance to it. Secondly, my other books were all carefully plotted, outlined, written. Counting the Cost just welled up inside of me and poured out my fingers.
Oh, did I mention that Counting the Cost was an award finalist in USA Book News’ “National Best Books 2009” award?
CRW: Congratulations! I also saw it listed in a contest for book trailers. If any
1 Comments on Wednesday Writer ~ Liz Adair, last added: 12/24/2009
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Tina Scott
Tina Scott, an award winning writer and artist gets her inspiration from life, but her tales gain a creative edge after taking a spin through her imagination. With seven kids and a handfull of grandkids, she has plenty of inspiration to keep her imagination alive.
CRW: Welcome, Tina, to Writers Mirror. It is really great to interview you today.
Tina: It's fun to have an interview, Cindy. Thanks.
CRW: No, thank you! Okay Tina, tell us what inspires you to write?
Tina: Life--writing has always been a part of me.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Tina: I do like to write daily. I'm not good at setting word-count goals though--I spend all of my time checking to see how many words I've written.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Tina: My family--but that's a good thing. If it weren't for them I'd probably stay sequestered in my writing room and never see the light of day.
CRW: How do you get past, through or around it and still make your writing happen?
Tina: When I don't have time to sit down to write, such as during the holidays, I am still thinking of my current WIP. I stop and make notes of ideas that come to me so that when I do have time, I have more to go from.
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Tina: Trying to get published. I've been trying to get an agent for a year now.
CRW: Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Tina: From bed. I keep a notebook, a pen, and a flashlight by my bed. On a good night I have to force myself to sleep.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Tina: I wrote the rough draft for my 230 page fairy novel in four months. My main character had a lot to say and I had to work hard to keep up with her.
CRW: By the way, Tina placed in a First Chapter Contest with this very fairy novel. I love fairies Tina, so am looking forward to you publishing this book. I always love when an author listens to the character. Others probably think we are crazy, but they really do talk.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Tina: All over. When I wrote my fairy novel--she told me her name.
CRW: There's that talking character again. What is your favorite writing food?
Tina: I don't generally eat while writing--it takes my consentration away from my goal.
CRW: Good habit. Chocolate tends to inspire me. Tina, please tell us about your book(s).”
Tina: I have self-published a children's picture book. It's a tale about a coyote who has a dream--how he saves the day and also makes his dream come true. My sister-in-law, an accomplished artist, did the illustrations.
CRW: Who did you use to publish it?
Tina: I self published through Instantpublisher.com
CRW: Please give us your best “Elevator Pitch�
9 Comments on Wednesday Writer ~ Tina Scott, last added: 12/17/2009
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Valerie Steimle
Valerie J. Steimle is not your average person. She was born into a Jewish family in Brooklyn, New York, converted to the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints when she was nine. She graduated from Ricks College in '79 and then attended Brigham Young University. She then went on to marry Robert Steimle at 21 and then had nine children. She has homeschooled all of her children with Robert during sometime in their life and also started writing for newspapers about family issues. She became a widow in 2006 as Robert passed away suddenly in his sleep after being married for 25 years.
CRW: Welcome, Valerie, to Writers Wednesday on Writers Mirror.
Valerie: Thank you so much for interviewing me. I love talking about my books.
CRW: Let’s start with your book called "Of One Heart: Being Single in the LDS World." When will it be available?
Valerie: It is available now on Amazon.com.
CRW: Who’s your publisher?
Valerie: They are called Createspace.com. It is a self-publishing company put out and run by Amazon.com.
CRW: Please give us your best “Elevator Pitch” for the book.
Valerie: Being single in a predominately married LDS world has great challenges. My book will help anyone who is single or knows a single friend to overcome these challenges.
CRW: How do we find your book on Amazon.com?
Valerie: Type my name Valerie J. Steimle on Amazon.com and three books will come up. You can also go to my website, http://www.strengthenyourhome.com/.
CRW: Excellent. What are the titles of your other two books?
Valerie: "Home Is Where the Heart Is" and "Home Is Where the Learning Is.: Homeschool Lifestyles from Homeschool Moms."
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Valerie: I started writing when there was an injustice occuring where I was living in San Diego. I see injustices all the time in family and social issues in our culture all the time, so I feel compelled to write about them. It's very theraputic.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Valerie: Yes, I do try to write daily but I don't set a word goal. I work on different manuscripts and ideas I have for several hours a day. Word counts can put too much pressure on me and I get writer's block so I set my writing time to 2 to 3 hours a day.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Valerie: That's a good question. Life itself. Children, new husband, my responsibilities at church and homeschooling. There is a lot going on.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Valerie: I take my down time at the computer. I finally have an office in my home so I can close the door and write for a while.
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Valerie: I love, love, love the publishing world. It is fascinating to me. I love that people will read my books and tell me it helped them in some way or they enjoyed what I had to say. It is so satisfying.
CRW: So this is crazy good then, not crazy bad. Where is the weirdest place you have worked on a writing project?
Valerie: When I have to watch soccer games, wait at the doctor's
3 Comments on Wednesday Writer ~ Valerie Steimle, last added: 12/11/2009
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Tanya Parker Mills
CRW: Writers Mirror welcomes Tanya Parker Mills as our special guest on Wednesday's Writer.
Tanya: Hi Cindy.
CRW: Hi Tanya, I know you have an interesting and vairied background that gives you much to draw from for your writing. Please tell us about it so we can begin to get to know you.
Tanya: Shortly after my parents got married, my Dad had a choice: go to work for this new broadcasting company called NBC...or work for the government's newest agency--the CIA. Guess which acronym he went for? Of course, I didn't find out about his undercover work 'till I was getting ready to go off to BYU. It certainly lent a new perspective to our years abroad in Greece, Turkey, and Iraq! (By the time we went to Lebanon, where I finished high school, he had left the agency and gone "legitimate," as they say.)
CRW: Wow! What stories your Dad could tell, that is if he was allowed to tell them. No wonder you have so much to write about. What inspires you to write?
Tanya: Knowledge. Ever since I was a kid, I loved reading encyclopedias and you can get a ton of ideas for stories simply by reading history and biography. I find that when I come across an interesting fact or piece of history, I simply have to start writing about it in some way, in order to better understand and remember it. (It was also my best method for studying in school.)
CRW: You must have been a great student with such interesting study methods. Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Tanya: Yes, except on Sundays...but even on Sundays, I try to post to my blog. I try and write from 9 am to 11 am (except on Wednesdays when we go to the temple...then I write from 11 am to noon), when my mind is freshest. I shoot for 3-5 pages, but don't always make it.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Tanya: Not my husband. He knows not to bother me during those hours. Now our cat, Peach, is a different matter (He's high maintenance, unlike our other cat, Anastasia). I'll be in the middle of a really good scene and he'll come and jump up and park himself right in front of the monitor.
CRW: Looks like he got caught here in this picture, but that he really doesn't care. So much like all the cats I know. So what do you do with the feline situta
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Today on Writers Mirror is a book review of "An Angel on Main Street," by Kathi Oram Peterson. The back cover blurb gives a good synposis and hook.
Micah Conners promised his mother he would be good in his new town. But with Christmas being only three days away, being escorted home by the sheriff does not bode well. Can the towering office be trusted not to tell what happened? Perhaps the ramshackle stable that has appeared on Main Street will side track him from spilling the day's events--or maybe his interest in Micah's widowed mother would do the trick. The last thing Dawn Conners needs is to hear her son is in trouble. She has enough to worry about with her husband gone and her daughter, Annie, ill. Even though Micah has told his sister the rustic structure in the middle of town is simply part of the town's decorations, Annie is sure that unseen angels are building the crude stable--which means baby Jesus is coming, and He can make her better. Terrified that his little sister might die, Micah vows to find the baby Jesus for Annie, even if it is only a plastic doll. But as Micah gets nearer to his goal he finds that angels are closer than he ever would have believed.
The blurb sounded interesting. I thumbed through the 100 page book published by Covenant Communications and thought it looked like a nice clean read. What I didn't count on was getting so involved in the story that I forgot to focus on reviewing the book. I just enjoyed it. I won't spoil the ending, but I did find the book page turning and my eyes moist.
Kathi has a clear writing voice. Her characters are strong and most of them quite likable. I have always tried to out think the author as I read. I usually figure out 'who done it' by about half way through a book. This time I didn't figure it out until about three quarters of the way. The only thing that seemed a bit out of whack was that several times Micah drew very adult conclusions and I had to double check that it was Micah saying or thinking these thoughts. Overall the entire book is a masterpiece in creating human emotions in both the characters and the reader.
The responsibly Micah feels toward his mother and sister is touching. His character shines through and shows that Micah is a good kid deep inside. The feeling extended beyond the book to include most youth. It is a comforting message that we have some wonderful young people in this troubled world.
The town sounds like a great place to live and has a good variety and flavor of people. Kathi allows her characters to achieve a good growth arch. She includes just enough physical and character hints that each of them come alive. They become real people, people
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Writers Mirror welcomes Connie Wolfe as our Wednesday Writer. Connie is a member of ANWA, American Night Writers Association. She has been writing for many years. Though yet to be putlished, she is an excellent writer and will someday soon be out there.
CRW: Welcome Connie, what inspires you to write?
Connie: I sometimes notice little things that trigger a scene for me. For instance, the other day in the grocery store there was a man with his little boy (about 5). The little boy looked up at his Daddy with an expression of pure hero worship and his father returned with a look I can only describe as gentle love. In my mind I imagined them as a divorced father who missed his time with his boy and took full advantage of his visitation rights. Since I am divorced and do not see a good relationship between my sons and their father, this really struck me as sweet and noteworthy. I’d love to write something that would inspire father’s everywhere to appreciate their children and to live so that their children could always look up to them with that same worshipful expression.
CRW: Do you set time or word goals daily for your writing?
Connie: I don’t do very well at setting a daily word goal. I tend to write by scenes, not words. When I have a scene fixed in my mind, I like to sit down, close my eyes, and just let it pour out my fingertips onto the keyboard. It isn’t unusual to come to the end of the scene and realize that I have tears running down my cheeks.
CRW: I beleive that if the writer cries as she writes it, then the emotions are so honest that the reader will too. What gets in your way of writing?
Connie: It would almost be easier to say what doesn’t get in my way of writing. Life happens. I can always find something else that needs done before I sit to write and before you know it, my day is gone. Perhaps my biggest stumbling block is emotional energy. Especially if I am working on an intense scene, it tends to drain me emotionally. If I am under a great deal of stress for the day, I find it very difficult to find the energy to write.
Recently, I find that I resist being scheduled. As of three months ago, for the first time in my life, there is no one calling the shots for me; no parents, child, husband or boss. I have been wallowing in that luxurious feeling like a pig in the mud. My time is my own to do with as I choose and it has been a heady feeling. I got a little unrealistic with it for a while, but am getting things back into perspective now.
CRW: Tell us a little more about how you are coming to terms with making time for writing?
Connie: It took a while to identify some of the problems, but I am doing my best to negate them. While there is always something that needs doing in the housework department, I have identified the things that drive me crazy if undone. Since my best writing time is early in the day, I am making it a policy not go to bed at night until those things are done so they don’t take control of the next day and my wrighting time. I also try to schedule other responsibilities and appointments for later in the day so it keeps my mornings more free to write. I limit myself in the time I spend with e-mails, blogs, etc. Reading was a distraction for me. Once I start a book, I hate to put it down. So, since I like to read as I eat, for breakfast I limit my reading to an Ensign article or a Relief Society lesson. To read for fun is becoming a reward for
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Donna has had a passion for writing since the age of 8 when she wrote her first short story. In between caring for six children, (7 counting her husband) she manages to carve out time to indulge in her writing obsession, with varying degrees of success, although she writes most often late at night instead of sleeping. A native of Arizona, she now writes Regency Romance and Fantasy. And yes, all of her heroes are patterned after her husband of over 20 years.
Donna Hatch writes clean romances known as "Sweet Romances." Writer's Mirror applauds Donna for her stance on keeping high standards in writing.
CRW: Thanks for being with us here on Writers Mirror today as our Wednesdy Writer Donna. What inspires you to write?
Donna: Anything might. A story I read that I wish had gone a different direction. Wondering about a secondary character in a book or movie. A song. Sometimes I just get a scene in my head, like watching a scene in a movie, and I build the rest of the story around it.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Donna: Word count doesn't work for me because sometimes I need time to chose just the right word or phrase. Instead, I try to write for at least two hours daily. It used to be longer, but now that I'm juggling three part time jobs, plus being a mommy, it's cut into my writing time. I write more when I'm suffering from insomnia.
CRW: In a nutshell, what gets in your way of writing?
Donna: Life. Kids. Self doubt.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Donna: Usually because I can't NOT write. Or sometimes I just make myself sit down and write something. Anything. Even if I'm sure I'll cut it later. Some of the biggest bursts of brilliance have occurred when I was sure I was writing utter trash, which most of it was, but there was often a jewel in there that I salvaged which changed the course of the story or the basic element of a character.
CRW: Intersting. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Donna: Self doubt. My interal editor. Critique partners, sometimes, when they don't "get" what I'm writing.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Donna: I can usually write the first draft anywhere from 3 weeks to 2 months. But I spend 4 months or more polishing it depending on how many interruptions I have. Novellas go much faster. I wrote both of my novellas in just a few days.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Donna: Nothing clever. Sometimes they come pre-named. Other times I rename them several times until I get just the right one. The character doesn't become 3 dimentional until I chose the right one. I stick to names that were used in Regency England or that were Norman Conquest names to help create that believable Regency feel.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Donna: I don't eat while I write unless my stomach wakes me up out of my writing coma. And then I'm so starved that I want whatever I can get my hands on fastest.
CRW: I love that you get into a "Writing Coma" or zone. Okay Donna, here's the million dollar quesion. Why are you a writer?
Donna: I am. Therefore I write. It certainly isn't for the glory or the money, since obviously I have neither of those.
CRW: Keep it up, you will! W
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Rachel Rager
CRW: Welcome Rachel Rager, to Writers Mirror, Writers Wednesday. Please introduce yourself to us.
Rachel: I’m the mother of three beautiful young girls. My husband and I have been married for eight and half years. I love to sing and have a degree in vocal performance for opera. I published By Love or By Sea in April 2009 but have seven stories that are complete and five works in progress! I love to read any good, clean romance book, ride my bike, go on picnics with my family, write, sing and bake! (Not usually at the same time, of course!)
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Rachel: I get inspiration all over the place. One day I wrote a character based on a young man I saw driving a truck through an intersection! I have notebooks everywhere so I can write down things whenever the thought strikes me. I also often find inspiration while on road trips.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Rachel: No. That takes the fun out of it. I try to write every day, but I don’t set myself a time limit. I prefer to take the journey and enjoy it. If I try to fulfill something, I get stressed and I find I don’t write as well and the ideas aren’t as good. I do set some goals occasionally, such as when I’d like to finish a chapter, but I don’t do that often. I prefer to just have fun.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Racgel: Everything. As a mother of three young girls, finding time to write is challenging, especially as they get older and take fewer naps. However, my biggest speed bump is checking emails when I get a chance to sit down to the computer. I easily get distracted.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Rachel: Persistence. It’s something I continually have to work at. But I restrict myself from checking my email once in the morning and once in the evening. That seems to help. Then when I’m on the computer, I can concentrate on writing!
CRW: Please tell us about your book, "By Love or By Sea."
Rachel: Here is the blub on the back of the book. ALICE LIND FRANK never forgot the boy she loved when she was just six years old, even after he was lost at sea. Now a young woman, Alice has found happiness in living and working with her grandparents, and in the affections of Clarence Hielott, the wealthy shipyard owner who intends to make Alice his bride.
WHEN A RAGGED SAILOR appears in town, Alice is reminded of the young boy who once held her heart. Upon learning that the sailor is in fact her childhood love, Caleb, she finds herself falling for him again.
BUT CLANRENCE REFUSES to let this ghost from the past destroy his plans for the future. He exposes the secrets of Caleb’s past, and Alice realizes that the boy she once knew is now a man with a dark history. Soon Caleb and Clarence are locked in a fierce c
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CRW: Welcome to Writers Mirror Anna. What inspires you to write?
Anna: What doesn’t? as my husband put it. My own life lessons and some amazing people I know.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Anna: No, since my first book was published I spend a minimum of 8 hours a day promoting my work. I write when I can.
CRW: Wow! Eight hours a day promoting. That is amazing. So I am afraid to ask my next question, but here goes anyway. What gets in your way of writing?
Anna: Promoting, it takes a lot of my time. It is a horrible monster but a very necessary one.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Anna: No quite there yet… if that’s possible? We do go camping and that helps with the writing. No internet, no door bell, no church meetings, no phone, no kids, you get the point.
CRW: Sounds like you are very dedicated and realize many of the sacrifices a writer makes. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Anna: Being interrupted by the phone or dinner when I am most inspired.
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Anna: Set it to the computer from beginning to end… about three months. To have it ready for publication take about two years. Except my last one, I started nine months ago and it’s not finished yet.
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Anna: Many places. Tolkien inspired my YA Elf Series. My Princess Series, a YA medieval romance series, is inspired by many things.
After I watched the musical Aida I wrote “A Kingdom by the Sea.” After I met a young elder who looked like he was made out of gold I wrote, “The Golden Princess.” I visited Disney World in Florida a couple of times and wrote “Princess Magnolia.” They have beautiful Magnolia trees there and I chose flower names for her ladies-in-waiting.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Anna: Invent them, mostly on the spur of the moment. Many come to me with the story. I have been complimented by my fans for the names of my characters many times.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Anna: Grapes, they are easy to grab and pop into your mouth before is time for the next idea and have low calories.
CRW: Why are you a writer?
Anna: I have tooooo much imagination and my husband said I better use it in books before I drive him insane. Love the stories… and love him, too.
CRW: Glad you added the last few words. Wise woman. Who do you hope reads your work?
Anna: Teens in trouble, anyone who need a boost of self-esteem or a reason to believe in themselves.
CRW: What would be the best complement you could receive from a fan?
Anna: That my books have inspired them to change their lives for the better.
CRW: What is the topic of the project you are currently working on?
Anna: “Curse of the Elfs.” The first elf book after the trilogy is undergoing the last revisions right now. Its underlying theme is trust. It will be published next year.
CRW: Please tell us more about it.
Anna: The book starts with war threatening in the southlands and the elfs go to help mankind rid themselves of this menace. By the time they are done with the threat the elfs have lost many of their kind, including their beloved commander and his mankind wife. (It is a rare case in which an elf has chosen a mankind woman for his eternal companion.) It continues nineteen years later when the elfs discover a new threat to their race, this time more powerful than a war. They are under the spell of a dead wizard and have been dying slowly for the past twenty years. The elfs are baffled for they are great healers; notwithstanding this fact, they can’t figure out what is killing them. Once they identify the cause of the problem, they know what to do. Their only hope of a cure is in the form of a man whom they not only have to find but also know nothing about, except that he is a servant to royalties. To find him before their gentle and beautiful race disappears is their desperate quest.
CRW: Sounds fabulous. Where can our readers go to buy your books?
Anna: My website http://www.annadelc.com
Amazon.com
Barnes&noble.com
CRW: Here are three of Anna's books now available.
"The Silent Warrior Trilogy"
CRW: Thank you Anna for sharing this with us.
Anna: It was my pleasure.
2 Comments on Wednesdays Writer ~ Anna del C. Dye, last added: 10/30/2009
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Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Writers Wednesday, Cindy R. Williams, Writer Interview, Heather Justesen, Add a tag
Heather Justesen is an Award Winning LDS Writer and Author of
"The Ball's in Her Court" coming out October 2009
Heather Justesen is an LDS author, business owner, volunteer-EMT, puppy mama, (not to mention the cats, fish, chickens and other assorted poultry), whose much-neglected hobbies number almost as many as her pets. Her love of books started long before she could read, so she was the only one surprised when she started to write stories of her own. Once she started writing, she found she could no longer let the stories stay in her head--she had to get them on paper. Her second book is slated for publication summer of 2010."The Ball's in Her Court" coming out October 2009
CRW: Welcome to Writers Wednesday on Writers Mirror. What inspires you to write Heather?
Heather: Different things. Sometimes I hear something in the news, sometimes I have an odd idea in a dream--though that's never led to a salable idea yet, the idea was fun to play with anyway. Sometime I overhear things down town or at the mall. Someone says something and my brain begins to whirl. A few times I've heard a sentence and then run home to write a scene around it for one of my many, many partially finished books.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Heather: The Internet, and my voracious need to read everything in sight. Oh, and real-life things like dishes and laundry, and keeping the house sort-of presentable so when unexpected computer clients stop to drop off their machines, I don't have to keep the door opened only to a crack. Thank goodness you can't see much of the kitchen from the front room.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Heather: I've actually had my husband disable the wireless signal to my laptop a couple of times so I don't get tempted to check out someone's blog or see who has updated their Facebook status. Otherwise deadlines seem to help--my critique group is excellent for that (and so many other things) because I *have* to have a new chapter to bring each week, so I can't get too distracted. As for the housework--I just try and avoid it as much as possible. It may not go away, but hey, if I sweep the kitchen floor today, it's going to need it again soon anyway, and waiting is more efficient--right?
CRW: I like your ideas on house cleaning. I have my morning routine of everyday chores, then I do three to seven loads of wash and one extra chore or project each day. I am able to pretty much stay on top of the house, but I like your way better. Now, back to writing. Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Heather: My schedule is really irregular so I just try and work around the edges. Some days I don't have time to do more than glance at my email and others I have six hours straight to work on whatever's eating at me the most. I'm an EMT so I've learned when I take a long patient transfer I bring my laptop so I can work on the way home. The back of an empty ambulance is actually a pretty good place for me to work since there aren't any distractions.
CRW: Wow! I have to say, you take the award for the most unusual place to write. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Heather: Editing. Getting almost to the end of the book and realizing that I dropped a storyline or that I've put too much emphasis on one angle and not enough on another and so the emphasis is off. I also HATE getting critiques back from my trusted writing friends because they always find the holes in what I thought was a well-crafted story.And, they're almost always right.
I also hate when I'm working on book A and storyline E starts picking at me--I know I can't do more than make a few notes on storyline E, I have deadlines now, and I actually do have to finish mostly-written books A, B, C, and D before I can focus on E. I mean, honestly, can't they wait? The answer to that is, of course, no, so I find myself writing a scene here and there on C, D, or E when I really need to get back and finish up A.
CRW: I do the same thing. A character in one book nags at me until I write just enough to get he/she/it off my back, then get back to my main project. Heather, how long does it take you to complete a book?
Heather: That varies significantly. The very first book I ever finished only took five weeks for the first draft. Of course, it has since undergone about four major rewrites and may still never see the light of day again, but it felt good to know I could do that. I was living in a hotel while we waited for our house to finish getting built, though, so there were very few distractions. I've had some take me literally years of rewrites, but mostly now I look about five months for the first draft and two to three months of edits, interspersed with long periods between versions while others critique and I put off editing. =) Of course, if I could get the other stories to leave me alone, I could probably do that a lot faster!
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Heather: Some from life experiences, the news, talking to friends. A lot of times I start with a general plot idea, and then after I write a bit I start to try and figure out more about the main players and their lives. I call my friend Danyelle and we brain storm for hours. She comes up with primo complications later in the books when mine all start to run out.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Heather: Most of the time I go to babynames.com and scan names until I find a few I like, but I have some characters I've named after friends and family. I find I tend to use the same names over and over. A couple of years ago I was going through several nearly-finished manuscripts and realized I'd used one particular name like six times--and never was that character a particularly well-loved one. I'm really not sure how that happened since I know several people by that name, and they're all pretty nice.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Heather: I actually don't eat much when I write. I like popcorn (totally plain right from the air popper), jordan almonds, crackers, well, almost any kind of finger food. It's hard, though, to have two hands on the keyboard if you're trying to eat. Of course, if I ate a whole lot more plain popcorn, and a whole lot less of that cake I baked just so I'd have an excuse to decorate it, I'd probably be a lot better off--and so would my hips.
CRW: Why are you a writer?
Heather: How can I not write? Since I was a little girl my imagination has been one of my best friends. I read like a demon, which of course, made me a backward, socially inept youth, which led to more reading and more living in my head. About ten years ago I finally decided to put one of those stories from my brain onto paper. From there on out there was no quitting. I've taken breaks to read voraciously for months, or in some cases even watch movies like crazy while I worked on my much-neglected hobbies, but I've never been able to excise storytelling from my blood.
CRW: Who do you hope reads your work?
Heather: This first book"The Ball's in Her Court," is about a woman's journey to find her birth family, and to find herself and her own self worth in some ways. I hope that anyone who struggles with those kinds of issues will read it, or friends and family of adoptees who want to search will consider that there are many sides to every story. I seem to have a lot of themes of family and family relationships because there's nothing more important out there. And of course I love a sweet, clean romance, so I really try to deliver that as well.
CRW: What would be the best complement you could receive from a fan?
Heather: "I stayed up until 2 AM to finish it because I couldn't put it down!" That would be high praise indeed. Though, actually, I hope someday to get a compliment that will blow even that one out of contention.
CRW: Heather please tell us about your book that is coming out soon.
Heather: My first book is about a woman who was abused and neglected as a child, then put into the foster care system. Several years, and various placements later she was adopted by a family when she was twelve. The book is about her as an adult and the journey toward reunion with the birth family she never knew in order to put to rest the memories that still haunt her. And, of course, she falls in love, because it wouldn't be much of a romance without that very important angle.
CRW: Do you have another project you are currently working on?
Heather: Which one? =) Aside from "Rebound" which is being released next summer, I have third one I'm working on final edits, and a fourth one that I'm just writing the ending for--and they're all different.
I'm just finishing up a story of a woman who marries her best friend so he will be able to gain custody of his recently-orphaned niece and nephew. When his unit gets called up by the marines, she's left trying to juggle single parenthood, her career--in which strange things start to happen--and her growing love for her friend.
CRW: Sounds interesting. Please tell us more about it.
Heather: Rena is a thirty-one-year-old single woman who is past ready to settle down, but her only real option is the very pleasant man she's been dating all summer. Her non-option is her close friend Tucker--who is completely delicious (the female members of my critique group agree with me on that, so it must be true). Though Tucker is, in many ways, her ideal, their assorted romances with other people have always managed to keep them apart. Until now--when two children obliterate the careful protection they've formed around their friendship.
CRW: Great story. I look forward to it and your other books. May I list your website or blog site?
Heather: Of course! My website: http://www.heatherjustesen.com/. My catch-all blog http://www.heatherjustesen.blogspot.com/ then I recently started a new blog that I post to daily called Clean Books for LDS Families http://www.cleanbooksforldsfamilies.blogspot.com/ It has a Facebook fan page I post the blog up to also. In a world where even childrens' books are getting questionable, I thought it would be great to have a list people could trust. I've had lots of support from other writers already and look forward to seeing what it can become.
CRW: Great goals Heather. My motto is the world needs more wholesome voices. I appreciate you taking your time to visit with us here on Writers Mirror. Good luck, and keep at it!
5 Comments on Wednesday Writer ~ Heather Justesen, last added: 10/23/2009
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Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Writers Wednesday, Cindy R. Williams, Joan Sowards, Add a tag
Joan Sowards is more than a writer of stories, she is a writer of music.
Please enjoy reading about this very talented lady.
CRW: What book do you have coming out soon?
Joan: "Haunts Haven", an LDS Ghost Story (Walnut Springs Press) is my first published novel. It is a romance about a young woman who inherits a hacienda inn that has been boarded up for over fifty years and the ghost who guards it. "Haunts Haven" will soon make its debut in a store near you.
CRW: Very exciting Joan! Please tell us about some of your other published works.
Joan: My short story “The Last Gift of Christmas” appeared in Covenant Communications’ 1996 book, "A Merry Little Christmas". Spring Creek published LDS Word Puzzles.
CRW: I understand you write music and offer it FREE to anyone. Is that right?
Joan: Yes, I have maintained a free LDS sheet music website for many years at:
http://joansowards.com/ that offers music for all church occasions, especially Young Women, including a song for the yearly theme.
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Joan: Any little idea. Each of my novels were sparked by one idea that someone presented—and each idea kept working on me until I had a plot. Jeni Grossman taught an ANWA writer's workshop about using newspaper photos and articles to get writing ideas, which led me to write "Haunts Haven".
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Joan: Life. There’s always something going on in the family, but now that my children are grown, I have a little more free time and I spend a lot of it writing. So often, I settle into writing and the grandkids come over, and who can resist grandkids? Not me.
CRW: How do you get past it?
Joan: Write when no one is wanting my attention.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Joan: I write daily, and sometimes I will set a word number goal if I’m trying to get something done. Writing isn’t number one, though. My family and husband get first priority.
CRW: Good for you. What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Joan: Plots. I love developing plots and subplots. I stick with it until it’s done, and usually will finish one novel before beginning the next.
CRW: Wow, that is impressive. I have so mand voices, oops, I mean characters in my head that I have to write about them or I can't move on with my current project. I have nat least fifteen books going on right now. How long does it take you to complete a book?
Joan: It varies. "Haunts Haven" was written in a few months. One of my favorite novels, "We Have Seen His Star," took three months, and that was writing all day, every day. I started "Chocolate Roses" a year and a half ago and had to set it aside (an exception to sticking with it till it’s finished) because I didn’t have the story to connect the beginning with the end. After a lot of pondering, brainstorming with hubby, and prayer, I picked it up again, and it all fell together.
CRW: Where did you get your idea for "Haunts Haven"?
Joan: In Jeni Grossman’s class, she handed me an article about ghosts that haunted old southern Arizona inns. She told us to ask, “What if?” So, I wondered what would happen if an unsuspecting young woman inherited one of those haunted inns, ghost and all. Haunts Haven blossomed from there.
CRW: Where do you get your character’s names?
Joan: I choose names that I feel the character wants—and they are sometimes quirky. After Walnut Springs Press decided to publish "Haunts Haven", they asked me to change three main characters’ names. They thought they were old fashioned or too odd. So, "Haunts Haven" is now the same cast, but new names.
I recently met a woman whose name is Cricket. I asked her if her parents had given her that name, and she told me that in high school there were five other girls with her real name, and that the principle told them to each pick a nickname. That night, I went home and changed the name of a supporting character in Chocolate Roses (she had a hiccupping problem) to Cricket, and also gave her the woman’s name-change story.
CRW: Cricket, what a fun name. What is your favorite writing food?
Joan: Sorry, I don’t eat while writing. I look at taking snack breaks as the way of getting my blood moving from sitting so long. I can sit and write all day, so I have to force myself to get up and move. Food is the motivator.
CRW: Why are you a writer?
Joan: Only because I love it. I’m not a master at the English language like some of my favorite authors, but I love to tell a story, work out subplots, weave it all together in a tapestry. It is very fulfilling.
CRW: Who do you hope reads your work?
Joan: Everybody! Everyone who loves an adventure. "Haunts Haven" is set in a tiny town in southern Arizona where everybody’s business is everybody’s business, small town politics prevail, and romance still happens. I think everyone—young and old—can find something to relate to in "Haunts Haven". A reader who dreams of restoring old houses can relate to Callie inheriting an old hotel and fixing it up. Along with the inn, she inherits a ghost—and everyone loves a ghost story. And for the romantic, Callie falls for a local cowboy and is also befriended by a unmarried, attractive rancher who is willing to stand with her against the ghost.
CRW: I am going to love it. I love scheming and fixing up houses, especially old ones. And who can pass up a good clean romance? What would be the best complement you could receive from a fan?
Joan: “I can’t wait for the sequel!” or “Your stories are so fun!” How about “Please send me 30 copies to send to my friends and relatives for Christmas—I loved it that much.”
CRW: Agreed! What is the topic of the project you are currently working on?
Joan: I just finished Chocolate Roses, an LDS Jane Eyre parody.
CRW: Please tell us more about it.
Joan: Rose Whitaker co-owns a chocolate stop in Tempe, Arizona and has developed a crush on a customer who comes into her store every Tuesday morning. He never pays attention to her, but unwittingly moves into her housing complex, bringing with him his four year old daughter. Rose is pulled into their complicated lives and the story goes from there.
CRW: Sounds like another great story to look forward to. Joan, I thank you for taking the time to be interviewed and wish you great success in all your writing.
For more information on Joan please check out:
http://www.joansowards.blogspot.com/
(music) http://www.joansowards.com/
7 Comments on Wednesday Writer ~ Joan Sowards, last added: 10/18/2009
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Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Cindy R. Williams, Writer Interview, Add a tag
Writers Mirror interviewed Joyce DiPastena
Writer of mystery, adventure and
"sweet" romance in the Middle Ages
(CRW is Cindy R. Williams)
CRW: Thanks Joyce for being with us here on Writers Mirror.
How many books have you written?
Joyce: Well, I've written 5 and am working on a 6th, but only two of my books are published so far.
CRW: I just happen to have cover pictures of those two published books.
CRW: What inspires you to write?
Joyce: Reading, both fiction or medieval history books, will often get me in the mood to write.
CRW: What gets in your way of writing?
Joyce: Time restraints, but I think mostly my own insecurities and self-doubts. It's so much easier to do ANYTHING else than sit down at the computer and confront the little voice in my head that says, "You, a writer? I dare you to think of something to write today!" And the fear that it's right...I won't be able to think of something, which in my head translates into "failure!"
CRW: How do you get past it?
Joyce: The only way to get past it is to sit down and write anyway. Even if I only type out a handful of words and I hate every one of them. I just have to keep telling myself while I'm fighting through a tough writing session today, "Tomorrow will be better", and usually (not always, but usually), tomorrow is.
CRW: Do you try to write daily, and if so, do you set a goal of a certain number of words?
Joyce: No, I don't use word goals, I use time goals to keep me on track instead. I set a timer for, let's say, an hour and tell myself I can't do anything else but sit at the computer and work on my writing until the timer goes off. I can't play any computer games, I can't play on the internet (I bought a laptop that's not connected to the internet so I can do this in a completely different room of the house where email and the internet can't tempt me), I can't go get a snack, I basically can't even get out of my chair until the timer goes off. My only two choices are to stare at the computer screen for an hour or write something on my novel. Actually, that kind of takes the pressure off me a little. If I'm really struggling to write, I can tell myself, "You don't have to write, you just have to sit here in front of your computer for an hour. If you don't want to write you don't have to, but you do have to sit here and stare at this screen until the timer goes off." Usually, simple boredom will eventually drive me to write SOMETHING. It's very, very rare that I don't end up typing at least a handful of words, which is always better than no words at all!
CRW: What makes you CRAZY about writing?
Joyce: Do you mean what drives me CRAZY or what makes me CRAZY to write! I just picked up a plaque at Target yesterday (which won't be yesterday by the time you post this, but you get the point) that says: "I live in my own little world, but it's OK. They know me here." I guess that kind of sums up how I feel about my writing. When my writing is really going well, it's like losing myself inside a world where I'm spending time with friends. And what can be a better feeling than spending time with friends?
CRW: How long does it take you to complete a book?
Joyce: Oh, don't ask me that! My first two (non-published) books took me 6 years each...and that was just for the rough draft! Loyalty's Web took me maybe three, and Illuminations of the Heart might have taken me two, but again, that was for a first draft. Because it took me so long to find a publisher for Loyalty's Web and Illuminations, both of the books ultimately went through many, many revisions and polishings before Leatherwood/Walnut Springs Press finally picked them up. So judging from my past track record, how long it'll take me to write my next book is anyone's guess!
CRW: Where do you get your ideas for your books?
Joyce: My first book (the one I wrote way back in college) kind of came in reaction to some romances I had been reading back then. It seemed like I'd read several romances where the hero appeared to be of a lower social class than the heroine, but in the end, he turned out to be a prince or a duke or something. I thought to myself, "So what would happen if the hero turned out to be exactly what he appeared to be all through the book? Someone of a lower social strata than the heroine? How would they resolve that without resorting to 'I'm really a prince in disguise'?" Also, I'd read several romances where the hero just infuriated me. He would be totally cold and abusive (verbally, not physically) to the heroine all through the book, until the last few pages when he finally almost literally fell down at her feet in worship without any serious groundwork for the change that I could see. That hero-type made me so mad, I took him and turned him into the villain for my first book. And I made the hero a medieval minstrel, because at that age, I couldn't think of anything that could be more romantic than a medieval minstrel. :-) So I guess you could say that many of my original ideas came from trying to turn current romance themes on their heads at the time. After that, it became like Marsha described in your interview with her. I ended up creating a sort of medieval universe of characters in that first book that I've basically been playing off of ever since.
CRW: Where do you get your characters names?
Joyce: I started compiling a list of medieval names way back in college, jotting them down from medieval novels I was reading or medieval history books I was reading for my history degree in college. Then I found this WONDERFUL book called The Oxford Dictionary of English Christian Names, by E.G. Withycombe. It's out of print now, so I was very lucky to pick up a copy when I did. This book traces the historical evolution of "English Christian names", and when each name came into usage in England, and where the names came from, such as France or Germany. From the information in this book, I was able to gather names that were "pre-Norman Conquest", "came over to England with the Norman Conquest", were listed in various medieval records that gave me actual dates for how early certain names were being used, etc. I typed up a list of Medieval Male and Medieval Female names from this book (and the names I'd collected previously) and this is the list I still use today for selecting names for my characters. If you're writing historical fiction and want to be sure you're using authentic names for your time period, THIS IS A FANTASTIC BOOK TO HAVE IN YOUR RESEARCH COLLECTION!!!
CRW: Maybe it is available on line.
CRW: What is your favorite writing food?
Joyce: I don't usually eat while I'm writing. It's one of those "you can't leave this computer until the timer goes off, even to get a snack" rules of mine. But if I'm finding myself excessively low on energy or unbearably sleepy, I'll sometimes grab a handful of Hershey Kisses to suck on. (I never chew my chocolate, so I can make them last quite awhile. ;-) )
CRW: What is your viewpoint of self publishing verses being published by a publishing house?
Joyce: Self-publishing gives you the greatest degree of control over your book, but I'll be honest, I know I've sold more books by having a publisher who got my titles into a brick and mortar bookstore than I ever would through purely online selling methods. Or at least, I've sold more, faster this way. Maybe over the long run, sales might have balanced out, I can't really say. For that reason, and because I've been blessed to have an editor who is truly enthused about my books and hence is able to give a big boost to my confidence when it's sagging, finding a traditional publisher has truly been a blessing for me. But I wouldn't rule out self-publishing again, if that were the only way to publish "the story I wanted to tell".
CRW: What is the topic of your next book that has you excited?
Joyce: I'm hoping to explore the world of the medieval troubadour a bit. But as usual, I have to admit that it's the characters in a new book that excite me more than a particular topic.
CRW: Please tell us about your next book.
Joyce: It doesn't have a title yet, because I'm terrible at coming up with titles. (Except for Illuminations of the Heart. That one just kind of came to me in a flash.) Right now, I'm just calling it "my troubadour book". It's still in the very early stages, and since I don't outline, it's hard to tell you where it's going to end up right now. But it's set a year after Illuminations of the Heart, and while Illuminations and Loyalty's Web both "played" a little with the historical character of Duke Richard of Aquitaine, the second son of Henry II, I'm hoping to use this book to "play" with the character of Duke Richard's brother, Henry the Younger, Henry II's eldest son and heir to the throne. Gunthar and Hel鮥 from Loyalty's Web have already made appearances and will have important parts to play in my new book (though the book isn't "about them" directly). My hero is a character from Illuminations of the Heart, and the heroine has ties to Loyalty's Web, although she wasn't actually in that book, but I'm not giving away how she's linked to it. ;-) Somebody has a grudge and is using a secret talent of my heroine's to achieve some vengeance. My heroine isn't completely ignorant of this and actually has some sympathy for her manipulator's cause. But when the "act of vengeance" comes, everything goes horribly wrong. (After all, what kind of story would it be if everything didn't go horribly wrong?) Can my hero sort everything out in time to save my heroine from herself? Or that's kind of the hazy plot I have in my head just now. There's no telling, though, how the story will actually play out in the end. You know, just recently I came across my original "outline" for Illuminations of the Heart. It's the only book I ever tried to outline before I wrote it. It bears absolutely no resemblance to the way Illuminations actually turned out. Someday I'm going to post that outline on my blog, just to give everyone who's read Illuminations of the Heart a really good laugh!
CRW: Thanks, Joyce, for sharing this information about yourself and your writing. I have read both of your published books and highly recommend them. I look forward to your next book.
To read more about Joyce, here is her contact information.
http://www.joyce-dipastena.com/
http://jdp-news.blogspot.com/
http://medievalresearch.blogspot.com/
http://medievalvignettes.blogspot.com/
http://anwafounder.blogspot.com/
7 Comments on Wednesday Writer ~ Joyce DiPastena, last added: 10/9/2009
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Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Tuesday Tales, The Princess and the Masquerade Ball, Write a Story Together, Add a tag
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Princess Maranda has been stuck dancing with a stranger for about a day now. HELP!
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Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Cindy R. Williams, Joyce DiPastena, The Princess and the Masquerade Ball, Add a tag
Please spend your time musing about The Princess and the Masauerade Ball. It's growing, but needs more to it. Joyce and I are playing a tennis match with the story, back and forth. Joyce, of course is the master at romance. Me? Not so much, but it is fun. See the story below, and have some fun and add to it. THANKS!
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Blog: Writers Mirror (Login to Add to MyJacketFlap)
JacketFlap tags: Tuesday Tales, Cindy R. Williams, Joyce DiPastena, The Princess and the Masquerade Ball, Add a tag
This is such a fun tale, lets all write more and help Princess Maranda.
(Remember only "G" rated stories.)
"The Princess and the Masquerade Ball"
Laughter and music floated up the grand staircase to where Princess Maranda clung to the marble hand rail. She knew her identity was safe behind her diamond studded feathered mask, but this did little to calm her nerves. She had overheard her mother, the Queen, speaking to several Ladies in Waiting about the appearance of the new Duke. His father had passed several years ago, and his son and heir had arrived just last week to accept his title and the many properties that it entailed including the "Haunted North Eden Castle." He was said to be a most handsome, scoundral, just like his father.
The music stopped. She knew it was time to assend. She took a deep calming breath and . . .
Friday, October 2, 2009 Joyce DiPastena said...
She heard an odd rustling nearby. A breeze accompanied it, brushing gently across her cheeks.
"Beware," a voice murmured, so softly she was sure she only imagined it. Until it came again, with a fluttering sensation against her ear.
"Beware."
Instinctively, she raised a hand to brush away the tickle.
"Beware...and do you mind? You've set my feathers all askew. Would you please smooth them out again for me?"
"Feathers? What..."
"Beware."
Princess Maranda nearly jumped out of her luscious silk gown. Her mask! It was the mask that was whispering in her ear!
Saturday, October 03, 2009 6:36:00 PM Cindy R. Williams said...
She gathered her wits and smoothed the feathers.
"There, does that feel better?"
"Does what feel better, lovely lady? I assume you are talking to me since I see no one else around."
Princess Maranda gasped as she looked up into the most brilliant blue eyes she had ever seen. It almost looked like they were twinkling at her with laughter. A midnight blue mask surounded those heart stopping eyes. The gentlman they belonged to was at least a head taller than her, and he smelled of fresh air and waterfalls.
"Excue me sir, are you speaking to me?" She asked, her voice quite breathless.
He continued to hold her gaze and replied . . .
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Proof read carefully to see if you any words out.
Author Unkown
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I don't know, Cindy. Sometimes I treat it more as a "writing season." There are times in my life (the past 8 weeks, for instance) when I seriously don't have the luxury of time to write a single phrase. Then there are other seasons when the writing urge hits and it coincides with a lull in the chaotic storm of motherhood. So, much as I wish I could just treat it like a job, I have to treat it like a hobby (dang it) and strike while both the iron's hot and the mayhem is at bay. Yay for moderation in all things! But for me it can't be all things at once being moderate. Love your blog, btw.
Good points Jennifer. I love the "strike when both the iron's hot and the mayhem is at bay". Being a mother is 1st, and the best. You are right about writing. Sometimes you just have to grabe what you can. Thanks for sharing!
Wise words to live by. Thanks!