EXCITING NEWS – LOOSE ID HAS PICKED UP AWAKING THE ALPHA

On March 30th, Amber Quill Press, L.LC. will cease all sales operations. The site will disappear, and soon all its books on Amazon, Barnes and Noble, All Romance eBooks, Kobo, and Apple will disappear too.

To an author, our books are like our children—born in travail, loved, and presented happily to the world. Although it’s been difficult for all the owners and authors, I’ve learned that losing my publisher is not the end to my writing career.

I’m happy to announce that Loose Id has accepted what is now Awaking The Alpha, and, with some revisions (they want the sex hotter!) and extensions by me, will release the new version in May. I’m eager to see what title and design for the new cover they choose. This story was a favorite of mine. And of readers, too. It hit #10 on the All Romance eBooks Top Ten Best Sellers. Thanks to everyone who bought it. Hurry, hurry if you want to get it!

For the cover of the original version, I accommodated Trace Edward Zaber, the designer for all the Amber Quill Press titles, by hunting for a photo of a contemporary American Indian.  It wasn’t fast, but I found one…a happy man who has also lived in the white world. When the books are removed from all the sales sites, that cover will still be in my computer. A reminder of happy times.

Meanwhile, you’ll find Unmasked and Amen To Love, with their original covers, cropping up on my website. I decided to indie publish them rather than shop them around, and I purchased the rights to the covers from Trace because I’ve always liked them.

med_InFromCold

Can two stubborn men come to terms with the real definition of “home”?

med_Unmasked

Blades on ice might have kept them together, but while one man is open about what he does, the other still hides behind a mask long after the masquerade party has ended.

Have a great year, people!

Carolina

http://www.carolinavaldez.com                   http://www.twitter.com/carolina_valdez

https://fingerstothekeys.wordpress.com

http://www.facebook.com/author.carolina.valdez

Did you know Carolina is pronounced car-oh-leena? And that the emphasis in Val-dez is on the first syllable? It’s a Spanish thing.

 

 

 

 

 

 

DEE ANN PALMER – TODAY’S GUEST

Please welcome my friend and guest, award winning author Dee Ann Palmer.

Multi-published in fiction and non-fiction, Dee Ann finally settled on writing sensual romances and deadly liaisons. Palmer is a member of RWA-PAN, RWA’s Orange County, California chapter, and the Los Angeles chapter of Sisters in Crime.

She agreed to answer some questions for you, and here are her responses.

    D2003ab1

  1. Plotter or Pantser? I’m a pantser. Can’t seem to change this no matter how hard I try. It doesn’t seem to fit my brain to plot it all out. However, I generally write novella length. At novel length, maybe I couldn’t get away with writing by the seat of my pants.
  2. Settings: real, totally made up, or based on a real place? So far, even my fantasies have some basis in reality. I have university degrees in nursing, and perhaps exposure to science influences me to at least a touch of reality.
  3. Boxers or briefs? Thongs or bikinis? No preference. What I select has to match the personality of my characters.
  4. Dogs or cats? Or gerbils or birds? Or fish? When our kids were growing up, we had cats, hamsters, frogs we brought home from the golf course, fish, and a box turtle. The rest of the menagerie are gone, but my husband and I are cat lovers, and an adored older cat lives with us now. Ella, whom we occasionally cat-sat, came to live with us permanently when her “mom,” one of our daughters-in-law, developed a life-threatening allergy to cats after having Ella for ten years.
  5. What’s the strangest thing you’ve ever done in the name of research. I accosted a Hell’s Angels motorcyclist outside a pharmacy to ask questions about motorcycles and “clubs.” With a serious face, he told me Hell’s Angels had gotten a bad rap, because most of the upstanding businessmen in a neighboring town were Hell’s Angels.
  6. What makes you laugh? Oh, so many things! The family I grew up in, although serious, found humor in everyday living. My hubbie and I enjoy the same sense of humor. We have neck problems, and I bought bed pillow after bed pillow until we found two that don’t trigger pain. Recently, I washed them, and when I opened the machine I found the new one had split open and emptied all its stuffing out. I carried the limp cover to my husband, and when I explained what had happened, the look on his face would’ve convinced you someone had died. I found myself laughing so hard I couldn’t get the words out to tell him why.
  7. What’s on your desk? Too many things! A small black sorting hat, a golden Quidditch snitch and a fluffy white Hedwick. Books including Nursing 2014 Drug Handbook, Taber’s Cyclopedic Medical Dictionary, The University of Chicago Spanish Dictionary, Eats, Shoots & Leaves, Oxford Pocket American Thesaurus of Current English, and Police Procedural, The Howdunit Series. Then pages and pages of my passwords, a travel disk drive, calculator and magnifying glass (because I always forget to bring my reading glasses here), a list of ISBN numbers I purchased, little notes of all kinds (the bane of my existence), printouts of deductible writing charges I’ve paid, pens, pencils, folders for stuff, bubble wrap to mail giveaways, mailing tape, a huge desk calendar, etc., etc., etc.
  8. What book(s) are on your night stand or your chair? I’ve just finished four e-books and written reviews, am on CD 20 of 24 of A King’s Ransome by Sharon Kay Penman, reading Sandra Brown’s Ricochet, Darrel James’ Purgatory, Christina Dodd’s One Kiss From You. Just completed  Elizabeth Lowell’s Forbidden (the one book of hers I haven’t enjoyed.
  9. E-books, print or both? I would hate to see brick-and-mortar stores disappear from our landscapes, but I love e-books. I’m donating hardcovers and paperbacks to Goodwill, Discovery Shops and the libraries I visit because I have don’t have room for them. There are so many books I haven’t read that I rarely re-read unless they’re a favorite, but recently I re-enjoyed Julie Garwood’s The Wedding. Absolutely love it and will never give it away.

HowToSeduceaKnight_200For more about Dee Ann, visit her new blog, Sensual Romance and Deadly Liaisons, at http://deeannpalmer.blogspot.com

Her new Website is still under construction, view the older one at http://www.DeeAnnPalmer.com

http://www.twitter.com/RunnerDeeAnn                  http://www.facebook.com/AuthorDeeAnnPalmer

http://www.amazon.com/author/dee-ann-palmer78xpc             http://www.barnesandnoble.com/c/dee-ann-palmer

Thank you for taking time to share your answers with us! 

Carolina Valdez

 

JOIN ME FOR THIS SUMMER CHALLENGE!

Can you write an unpolished thousand words a day? By that I mean unedited words. Pound out paragraphs you may later move around or delete, sentences you may rearrange or cut, characters you may need to make more or less important. New characters you later see you need to introduce.

If you’re writing non-fiction the same rules apply.

The best I’ve gotten so far is about 250 words, but I’m an edit-as-I-write person and this is hard. My mind hangs up when I see I need to fix something, make it better or delete it. But, you see, here the objective is to just Press On!

This summer, I’m aiming for that 1,000 words a day. I’ve already stumbled out of the gate, but today I’m really going for it. No doctor appointments, no laundry to do. All I have to do is fix the meals, feed the cat and brush her, clean the litter box. It’s my day to go all the way.

I’ll let you know how I do.

ATTENTION READERS – You can enter the challenge by reading a book a week for the next six weeks.

By mid-August, leave a comment here to let me know how you’re doing and I’ll enter you for some chances for a free ebook from my backlist or some other prizes.

Post your comments here!

Meanwhile, enjoy this photo by my husband of our 18-mile bicycle route.

SnowMountain3Carolina Valdez  http://www.CarolinaValdez.com    @carolina_valdez      Watch for me on Facebook as Author Carolina Valdez

WHAT IT MEANS TO BE A WRITER

Hello there!

I’ve learned that when I appear on various blogs as a guest, there are certain questions readers are curious about. Not just about me, but for writers in general. Why, for instance, are we writers?  Here are my personal responses to some frequently asked questions.

Why do you write?

My mother was a member of the Texas Storytellers Association, and as a little girl I became fascinated with the rhythmic flow of words as I listened to her practice. I composed my first stories in school in the third grade. I remember writing very small, practicing my newly acquired skill of cursive writing on lined paper. I was hooked. At an early age I also became a voracious reader. Now you’ll find me juggling between two audio books and a print one almost every day. I feel it’s essential for writers to read, read, read, so I do it by ear, on my PC, Kindle or iPad.  Does any of it rub off on me? I can only hope.

What do you write?

Although I’ve been published in non fiction and fiction, I consider myself a Romance writer. For the past eight years, I’ve concentrated on composing sexually explicit m/f and m/m romances. Time To Be King, my latest Amber Allure release, is an erotic m/m novella. My main man there is a shapeshifting knight-dragon prince. If you like stories about chivalry, knights, dragons, action, adventure, and lots of sex this is a story for you.

What advice would you give new writers?

Long before I was a winner of the 2004 Amber Heat Wave Contest and became an Amber Quill Press author, I got it in my head to write a novel. I was in a critique group of published writers, and was so ignorant about genres I didn’t even know my book was a Romance—someone in the group had to tell me. I sold it before becoming connected to AQP, but now I have the rights back and you’ll soon see it self published on Amazon under a different name.

It is incredibly tough to write a book, especially when you don’t know what you’re doing. I do not recommend it! My advice to beginners is to study the craft. University and community college classes are readily available. Had I known to do so, I would have joined Romance Writers of America—its chapters offer online classes—and Sisters in Crime long before I did. Treat yourself to a writers conference or two, sit in to be inspired by and ask questions of successful authors. Often you can pay to submit 20-50 pages of the opening of your book for critique by a published author. In the RWA chapter I attend, almost every month members can enter to win a free critique of the early pages of a book.

Do you write every day, and how do you schedule your writing time?

Even though I’m retired, there’s no structure to my writing day. I write when I can. If I have a publisher’s deadline, or have set one for myself, I take time to meet it. However, my husband and my family come first. If I’ve received edits on one manuscript, often the galleys on a previous one come into me just as I’m polishing the next manuscript to submit. It’s a stressful juggling act, so strict scheduling isn’t always possible.

Do you flesh out your characters before you write? Do you lay out your plot?

There are methods for accomplishing both of these before you begin, but Laurie R. King, of The Beekeeper’s Daughter fame, feels one of the joys of writing is watching your characters unfold as you write. I agree with her. I write novellas, which are under forty thousand words, and I don’t outline or plot.

Some authors say they hear their main characters demanding to be heard. I see and feel my characters first. I know my setting right away, but I never know all the characters or their conflicts until I set my main people in motion in that setting. Believe me, I’ve tried to flesh everything out before I start, but my characters and their story aren’t real to me until then. I’m a little like mystery author Denise Hamilton, who says inspiration for her story, plot and characters only begins when she sits down and starts to type. In contrast, the late Stephen Cannell would write a seventy-five page synopsis of a four hundred page book first. You learn to know what your process is.

How do you decide on your settings?

The setting has to fit my characters.  I’ve written in many subgenres of romance, and my settings are usually California–where I’ve grown up (see yummy book cover designed by Trace Edward Zaber, below)–but they also include Italy’s Pompeii, Naples and Venice, Medieval England, and Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.  I’ve toured Great Britain–which includes southern Ireland, Wales and Scotland–but not Italy or the UAE. Obviously, my research has to be thorough to put my readers in the places I haven’t experienced. I use the library, literature from tour agents, the Internet, speaking with those in the know, and have even resorted to purchasing travel videos of a region.

Recently, I was pleased when an author who has been to Naples told me the setting to Night Train To Naples was exactly right.

My favorite coffee shop here in town is the setting for one of my earlier m/f contemporaries. Here again, I wrote a shapeshifter into the story before I knew what I was doing or the term for it. I just saw the story as having paranormal elements. Oddly, I was attending a Left Coast Crime Conference in Monterey, California, when the idea for the shifter came to me. I was in that city’s fantastic aquarium when the idea struck.

Are your characters modeled after anyone you know? Are you in your characters?

My characters are never modeled after people I know. They’re created out of bits and pieces of what I’ve learned about human nature, and knowledge obtained through science, nutrition, medicine, and love. They come from what I may have experienced through loss or physical pain, surviving earthquakes, high winds, floods and fires. But they are not me. They are purely fictional.

 ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Writing became a part of Carolina Valdez’s life when she composed her first stories at the age of eight. She chose a career path in nursing, only realizing she was also a writer after she’d made her first sale.A member of the Published Author Network of Romance Writers of America (RWA-PAN), the award winning author is multi-published in fiction and non-fiction. Today she concentrates on sizzling, sexy tales in several Romance subgenres. Suspense crops up in some of her stories, no doubt the result of her affiliation with Sisters in Crime/Los Angeles.

Valdez has competed in over a hundred foot races, five of them marathons (26.2 miles). She lives in southern California with her husband.

Website http://www.CarolinaValdez.com

Blog: https://fingerstothekeys.wordpress.com

Cover for Desire: Hot & Sweet

Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/carolina_valdez

WAITING FOR TWILIGHT

I passed on sleeping in an icy tent four nights running to see the midnight opening of this final movie of a series I love. I let younger people buy those tickets because, to be frank, I couldn’t have stayed awake. Instead, I hit the first showing the next day, and the film didn’t disappoint. Patrons oohed and ahhed when Edward Cullen first appeared on the screen, and we heard wolf calls for Jacob Black. Old and young alike, we broke into applause when the movie was over.

I didn’t want it to end.

Reading Stephanie Meyer’s four volume Twilight saga—and the Sookie Stackhouse books by Charlaine Harris—triggered a fascination with vampires for the first time in my life. The incredible imaginations and storytelling skills of these authors ignited an urgent need to create my own living dead hero.

I had already promised my publisher—Amber Allure—a novella set somewhere in Italy. In searching for a title I hit on Night Train, an old rhythm and blues song from long before my time. Night Train To Naples became my title because I liked the alliteration. Now I had to decide who would be on that train at night…and why.

Although some of my author friends tell me they hear their characters clamoring to have their stories told, I never hear mine. I see them. Feel them. My mind filled with a vision of Alexandros Nicolaides–a tall, strong, Greek vrykolakas, his long blond hair streaming, the emerald of his eyes deepened by the experiences of seven hundred years of being undead.

…Alex boarded the night train to Naples in Rome and chose a seat at the back of the car facing the door. To help hide his pale face, he pulled the collar of his suit jacket up before settling into the humming, slick sway of the brightly colored train, feeling satisfied at how yesterday had gone. After successfully delivering a grouping of matched diamonds and a remarkable ruby spinel to a new customer in Lyons, he’d flown to Rome today on the company plane…

As you can see, my Greek vamp lives in contemporary times, and, because I love gems and precious stones, he is a gemologist and a diamond courier. Intended as a standalone, the story evolved into the Night Train paperback series collection.

At the time I was developing this first novella, one of my friends told me she had no interest in weaving a tale of the living dead. “I don’t know the rules for writing them anyway.”

Were there rules for what the mythological creatures we call vampire, vrykolakas or the Romanian strigoi are like? If so, I needed to find out before I wrote anything more.

My research revealed man as a fearful and superstitious being. Almost every culture seems to have had a demon or spirit—or both—that sustains its life by sucking the “essence” out of a person, usually by the drinking of their blood or sucking out their soul. The creatures have similarities, but differences as well. For us in the Western world, gothic horror films and books have set the tone for us to see vamps as horrifying, blood-thirsty creatures both cruel and impersonal. They include fanged male and female undead beings who cast no shadow, whose images can’t be captured in a photograph or seen in a mirror, and who can only be killed by decapitation, fire, sunlight, silver, or wooden stakes, etc. Even displaying the cross of Christ in the face of this evil can’t protect you, but garlic or waving a branch of wild rose or hawthorn can. (Go figure.)

Despite such evil figments of man’s imagination in the mists of time, it was only in the early seventeen hundreds that records in southeastern Europe detailed the folkloric fear that the dead could return as revenants, a possible result of suicide, evil beings inhabiting the body, witches, or the bite of what today would be called vampires. In some areas, mass hysteria resulted in weird treatments of corpses to prevent this. Suspected revenants were executed in public.

John Polidori coined the word vampire with his 1819 book, The Vampyre; A Tale. He was Lord Byron’s physician, and three years earlier the two of them had joined Percy Shelley, Mary Shelley (of Frankenstein fame) and Claire Claremont, the mother of Byron’s daughter Allegra, in Geneva. Shut indoors by rainy weather, they spent the days spinning horror tales. Polidori’s book emerged from this setting, the idea triggered in part by an unfinished novella by Byron. (The Vampyre; A Tale is free on Amazon/Kindle.)

Lord Ruthven, Polidori’s vampyre, is charismatic and suave. The killings aren’t graphic. The story meanders, but what would you expect from something written two hundred years ago?

Many of today’s tropes about vampires, such as fangs, began in 1846, with Varney the Vampire; or, The Feast of Blood. It was a Victorian penny dreadful series of pamphlets released by James Malcolm Rymer over the next year. It was later published in book form.  For $1.99 you can buy it for your Kindle, but the only reviewer describes it as repetitive and “boring, boring, boring.” I have not read it. It’s more expensive for the Nook.

In Dracula, fifty years later, Wikipedia credits Irishman Bram Stoker as having drawn on werewolf and demon lore to voice the “anxieties of an age,” which would be the Victorian age. It spawned the horror genre, and fits in the categories of vampire, gothic, horror and invasion literature.

Queen of the horror genre Anne Rice’s Interview with a Vampire, the first book in The Vampire Chronicles, was released in 1976. Long before I’d imagined writing about them, or had even heard of Anne Rice and what she wrote, I saw this film. Shallow me went only because it starred Brad Pitt, Tom Cruise, Christian Slater and Antonio Banderas.

It scared me spitless, and I rushed out to the lobby for a few minutes to recover, forcing myself to return only because I wanted to see how it ended—rather depressingly, I might add.

Later, I slogged through a large number of audio CDs of the Chronicles’ richly woven Blackwood Farm. Right out of my nightmares, it depressed me even more. I am obviously too timid for tales of horror.

Thank the good Lord, vampires are not real. All of which means the ideas of what they are and what they do originated in the minds of storytellers,  writers…and a few crazies too, I’m thinking. Fortunately, the wonderfully imaginative Meyers and Harris have shown us we can alter the historical picture and any “rules” regarding the vicious nature of the living dead. We can continue to break the mold.

Twlight’s vampires live secretly among humans, and some avoid the gothic horror of ripping out human throats by confining themselves to a quick, merciful kill to slake the blood of big game animals. They never sleep because they never tire. They avoid sunlight only because their skin sparkles like diamonds in it, and humans seeing that effect would realize what they were. The discovery would incite vampire hunts to rival those of the revenants in the seventeenth century.

By contrast, the vamps in Charlaine Harris’s Sookie Stackhouse books have come out of the “closet.” They live openly among humans in southern Louisiana, and can be seen in a mirror and photographed. They sleep, but only during the day because sunlight is deadly. Silver can burn, and even small exposures are toxic over time. Stakes and knives are among several things that destroy them. Only rogues murder humans and drink their blood. The others drink synthetic blood, or “true blood” (thus the name of the TV series) donated by humans.

Twilight is a teen romance with its share of suspense and danger, loosely and imaginatively based on Romeo and Juliette’s tragic love and the story of feuding families. If you’ve followed the series, you know another “vampire rule” bit the dust—our stories are allowed to end happily ever after now. We can thank Ms. Meyer for smashing that barrier.

It was important in crafting my three Night Train novellas that the vampires be my vampires, not those of someone else. I plucked the traits I wanted from the stereotypes, and then made up a few of my own.

If you’re interested in writing about vampires, my advice is to forget about rules. They don’t exist. As long as you make your vampires believable, they may be anything you wish them to be.

Go for it.

Night Train Paperback CoverBeware when you hook up with a vampire. Your life will never be the same. Fabulous adventures may be thrust in your path, and the loving may be beyond hot, steamy and sensual, but you could be seduced into a darkness as annihilating as the black hole formed by the death of a star…

Previously available only in electronic format, these three tales of sizzling gay romance have now been combined for a paperback edition. Included are the tales…

Cover to Night Train To NaplesNight Train To Naples – The hot passion of an immortal for his human lover; the vengeful vampire who wants to kill them; and the world of precious stones. Download of this one story:  http://www.amberallure.com/NightTrainToNaples.com

Night Train To New Orleans coverNight Train To New Orleans – A stalking killer; the world of precious stones; and the passion of an immortal for his human lover. Download this one story: http://www.amberallure.com/NightTrainNewOrleans.html

tnNightTrainVeniceDiamonds may be a collector’s best friend, but for a courier of precious stones and metals the next delivery could mean death. Download this one story: http://www.amberallure.com/NightTrainVenice.html

THE NEXT BEST THING BLOG HOP

Hi there!

Although this blog hop has ended for me, I recommend them as a great chance to acquaint yourself with new authors or visit those whose books you enjoy.

The answers to my Ten Interview Questions for this hop were:

1. What was the working and final title of your book? My titles are approved by the publisher before I write, so the title of my novella was always Time To Be King.

2. Where did the idea come from for the book? The idea was sparked by Tears Of The Dragon, my male/female erotic romance. This is the sequel to that story.

3. What genre does your book fall under? Romance, with subgenres of Medieval, fantasy and shapeshifter.

4. Which actors would you choose to play your characters in a movie rendition? I could see someone like a blond Russell Crowe (think Robin Hood) as my knight-dragon prince and a brunette Brad Pitt as his knight lover.

5. What is the one sentence synopsis of your book? A dying dragon king, the shapeshifter knight-prince destined to succeed him, and the risk he takes with the choice he must make.

6. Will your book be self-published or represented by an agency? Neither. This gay erotic romance is available now from my publisher. Click on the Excerpt link on the bar above.

7.  How long did it take you to write the first draft of your manuscript? Because I don’t write novel length, I don’t do drafts. I write and edit as I go. It takes me three months to polish 16,000-39,000 words.

8. What other books would you compare this story to within your genre? Christine Feehan’s shapeshifter Carpathian series (although they’re male/female romances).

9. Who or what inspired you to write this book?  A full page illustration in Realms of Fantasy magazine inspired Tears Of The Dragon. A lovely, mythical princess and her entourage were riding through a field of flowers, and I wanted in the worst way to write about her; to capture in words the magical quality and my feelings. I have no idea why I made her a dragon princess who, in human form, falls in love with a knight. Time To Be King is the story of their little shapeshifting son, whom, as a mother of sons, I fell in love with. Now he’s all grown up… first knight to the earl who rules the fantasy kingdom of Ahnerion.

I also wanted to express what it feels like to be different and forced to keep secrets on pain of death. The theme is also about making choices.

10. What else about your book might pique the reader’s interest? If you like strong characters who love fiercely and fight for honor, kingdom and family, plus a story with action, adventure and a touch of betrayal, you will like Time To Be King.

Note: You must be eighteen or older to purchase my stories.

Happy reading!

Carolina

Cover to TIME TO BE KING

A dying dragon king, a shapeshifting prince, his human lover

AT ALL COST

…there are things I’d like to avoid in life. One being prison. Another, snakes in my garden–most particularly, venomous ones.

As for the prison thing, I’m claustrophobic. And have you seen the size of some of the cells? California’s San Quentin Prison opened in 1852, and inmates are still housed in some of the old cells.Visualize a bunk bed along one wall and so close to the opposite wall that one man can’t pass the other to get to the meal pass-through or the toilet. Think about the inmate unjustly convicted of murder who won his freedom years later only to discover he’d lost his distance vision because he hadn’t seen the outside world in all those years. He even exercised in an indoor cage.

I can’t imagine life without being outdoors. Of seeing a stormy sky or a dark velvet one winking with stars, of dancing in the rain, watching the sea froth over my wading toes or feeling them go numb tromping through deep snow, or fighting the hot and damaging Santana winds in southern California.

My college choir once sang in San Quentin, and it was a big deal. The prisoners we were allowed to sing for clapped wildly after each song, but they cheered, pumped fists in the air and stomped their feet when we sang Freedom. The goosebumps part of the visit, however, was the visit to the empty green room–the death chamber–because this prison houses all of California’s male death row inmates. Our tour guide explained the procedure, and none of us spoke a word until we were safely back on our bus and the prison gates had clanked shut behind us.

Later, as a graduate married to my college sweetheart, I sang in a state mental hospital with a madrigal group.”You must remain with  your group. If you wander off it may take time to find you and prove you don’t belong here.” If I was ill and needed to be there that would be one thing, but I guess I need to add “sane and lost in a mental hospital” to my list of things to avoid at all cost.

My list contains things very appropriate for mysteries and suspenses, but have I used any in my romances? The joyous, sensual things, of course, but so far venomous snakes, murderous rogue vampires, attacking knights and lethal, marauding Indians are the major menaces.

Romance touches all the senses. Using the things we want to avoid at all cost are as valid in our stories as the things that bring us pleasure.

Come back the week of November 26 for The Next Best Thing Blog Hop! Read about my writing process and why I wrote Tears Of The Dragon and its sequel, Time To Be King.

Carolina

A knight’s flaming passion for the dragoness woman he loves…

ON BEING EDITED

Hello!

I’m happy to see you here again.

Early in my writing career, in a day when manuscripts were always hard copies, I won a national writing contest offered by a major professional publication. I was shocked when my piece was returned with lines crossed out and notations for corrections penciled in blue in the margin. When I wrote and expressed my embarrassment, the publisher assured me that even the most experienced writers faced an editor’s blue pencil.

My fragile ego clung to the fact that I’d won “First Award,” no other awards had been offered and the contest had been open to everyone in the United States. I learned to appreciate that blue pencil, was especially grateful for a suggestion to rephrase something that could have been misconstrued as a criticism I didn’t intend.

You, of course, are the first editor of your work. The late Stephen Cannell was outspoken about his severe dyslexia. He sometimes dictated entire books to a secretary. Also, her ability to interpret his poorly worded, misspelled scribbles aided in his success as an American television writer, producer, novelist and sometime actor. If you don’t do grammar, spelling and punctuation well, hire a copy editor before you submit to an agent or publisher.

I’m multi-published in fiction and non-fiction. Probably fifty different people have edited my work, most of whom I’ve never had contact with or seen. Some were great, some hardly edited at all. I sometimes thought the lack of editing meant I was such a competent writer that my work didn’t need it. Now, when reprints of the latter are re-released, I’m often embarrassed by their lack of help cleaning up my writing.

Even as I type this, I wish my current editor could check it before it’s posted. I’ve always been good with grammar, spelling and punctuation, but experience taught me I’m not as skilled as I’d thought. I’ve learned to trust my editors with it all.

In my view, an editor’s job is to make your piece the very best it can be–and to steer you away from anything that might be litigious. Editors know the writing style and other preferences of their publisher. They know the reader demographics. They’re aware of who has been sued for what and the outcome of those cases. Editors, too, have their preferences. One I worked under insisted that if you italicized a sentence, you italicized the ending period. The editor at another publisher consistently removed my period italics.

When I wrote Sweet Chocolate Ecstasy, it was an editor who steered me away from the term “Turtles” in my heroine’s struggling chocolate shop. Surprise, surprise, it’s trademarked. You can still walk into privately owned candy stores and see it used for their caramel-and-pecan candies covered with chocolate, yet any day they could receive a letter warning them to cease and desist. Do you have access to a See’s Candies store? Browse through the names or check online and note the ™ and ® after some flavors. Check the wrapper of the next candy bar you buy.

As a writer, I see my role in the editing process as learning to work with my editor. Or editors. Some houses use an editorial board to review your work. It’s my job not to be cantankerous at some of the approaches editors use regarding changes. They’re looking at my work the way a reader would, and it’s not a criticism of me as a writer (after all, they bought my work), it’s a catch. Thinking “I just said that!” is a clue I didn’t make it clear, not that my editor wasn’t reading carefully. She wants to keep my readers reading.

I usually accept most of the edits requested, but it’s also my role to question those I don’t understand or that I think aren’t important to the story or don’t belong at that point in the narrative. I have the right to reject a suggestion, even fight for it if I feel strongly about it, but first I ask myself if it’s worth it. Is this ”a hill I want to die on,” as the saying goes?

On my first murder mystery, I was so caught up in unfolding my story that I didn’t realize my undercover agent was letting the killer murder again before the agent arrested her. This editor’s approach was, “I hope you understand why I can’t let you do this.”

Oops, and thank you very much!

I’m basically a romance writer, and on another mystery story the watchful eyes of three editors resulted in my cutting a banquet description. “Too flowery.”  I laughed because it was the kind of thing romance readers love, but not what mystery readers want. Another time they let me know I’d had detectives respond to a scene when only patrol officers would.

I have a friend whose feathers were ruffled when editors questioned the shoes of her protagonist, who was competing in a long distance race. This friend runs distance races, and was writing about something she knew. She always wears the same brand of shoes, and marks the backs of the heels with permanent black marking pen to separate new and older pairs. The protagonist in her story was in shoes marked like this in a half-marathon.

“Can you really see those marks from that far away?” The challenge came from editors who weren’t even runners.

Sometimes you simply delete things editors question, but the shoes and markings were important to the story. My friend’s irritation ended the day someone walked down her block wearing running shoes. The writer raced out the door and watched the backs of those shoes…then considerably shortened the distance in her story.

For the past eight years, I’ve had the good fortune to work with the same two editors at Amber Quill–a small, independent, royalty paying press. My manuscripts go first to my main editor. Since my work is sexually explicit, once I’ve done the corrections she has requested, the manuscript is forwarded to the editor who reviews all the erotic stories. Unless I’ve goofed in some way, I never hear from the second editor, but twice she’s saved me from mistakes.

My main editor and I have established a friendly as well as a professional relationship, even though we live in different countries and have never met or spoken by phone. I wouldn’t call us Best Friends Forever–and I don’t think she would either–but we know a little about our backgrounds and sometimes share how we spend holidays with our families. She’s always the first to congratulate me when I place in a contest or hit Amber Quill’s Top Ten Best Seller list. I remind her it’s a shared success; we’re a team.

One of my friends was quite upset after an editor handed her over to someone else after having worked on two of her books. Later, she confessed to feeling relieved. “We’ll never understand each other, and she was wise enough and experienced enough to remove that tension for both of us.”

What if you get someone you can’t deal with no matter how you try? I have another friend—with forty-six novels to her credit—who writes for a New York house. Suddenly they switched her to an editor whose picayune demands became so stressful she advised her agent she couldn’t work under that person again. “Not even if it means leaving this publisher.” Her agent negotiated a change, and she continues to write for them.

Digitally published authors rarely have an agent, and so would have no buffer like my friend above had. These houses tend to be small, with a closely knit staff and a limited number of editors, so there are few options. If you can’t work things out with the one assigned to you, you might want to consider whether this is the hill you want to die on before you approach the publisher for a change. For sure, don’t unload your irritations on her or him. Be professional, respecting that this is a business.

Happy reading! Happy writing!

Carolina

Cover for TIME TO BE KING
SHAPESHIFTING DRAGON FANTASY

THERE COMES A TIME

…as a writer when you have to force yourself to put your butt in the chair and your fingers to the keyboard and finish that next chapter, outline, synopsis or whatever project you’re on. Unless an idea has set your brain and fingers on fire, forcing yourself to work on your writing may be the toughest thing you have to do to make yourself reach those final words.

Published authors say, “Lots of people have three chapters of a book in a drawer at home. You know you’re a real writer when you’ve finished the book. ”

I used to run marathons. They’re all twenty-six miles, three-hundred eighty-five yards long. I belonged to a huge Fitness Club for runners and walkers, and we had a psychiatrist member. We’d train for seven months for a marathon, and he’d talk to us about the mental toughness it takes to go the distance. His advice became our slogan — “Just Do It.” No excuses, no wondering if you can, just do it.

I especially remembered that when I jogged and walked my first one, the Los Angeles Marathon. The last four miles were brutal. I felt absolutely and totally awful. I was hot, sweaty, hungry, thirsty and in pain. I came alongside a woman about my age, who remembered WWII, and she said, “This is like the Bataan Death March.” It was oh, so true, yet I didn’t once think about dropping out or questioning whether I would make it. I just did it.

I began a romance novel umpteen years ago, in a time when we didn’t have computers, the Internet or copiers in our libraries or homes. I was a wife and the mother of young children with a job outside my home. There wasn’t much time for writing, yet I’d draw myself up to my full height and say, “I’m writing a novel.”

Sometimes I even brought it out and worked on it. Often it would be two or three years before I got back to it. Had to read it all over again because in the meantime I’d forgotten the names of my characters, where I was in the story, and even which part of the house or outdoors the scene I was working on was in. In the back of my mind was this nagging idea that someday I’d finish this book and sell it. As the years passed, I realized  I needed to quit my job or I’d never finish it. So I quit.

I splurged on a couple of writers conferences, then treated myself twice to weekend writers retreats in the mountains. Cool, clean, bracing air and an author instructor who read what we’d written that day, critiqued it at night and met with us the next morning to make suggestions. On the last day of the second retreat, I GOT IT DONE. It was picked up by an epublisher first time out.

This blog is dedicated to sharing my writing life and my experiences in getting it done – butt to the chair and fingers to the keys.

Happy writing! Don’t forget to read!

Carolina

NIGHT TRAIN trade paperback collection
NIGHT TRAIN, trade paperback collection