As Thanksgiving approaches once again, I'd like to extend my warmest wishes to all who venture over to my blog and continue to support me in so many ways. I hope you all have the most meaningful holiday season ever.
My editor has the Sticking Point manuscript in her hands and promises to have it back to me next week. Of course I want to drop everything else and "fix" it and get it off to the publisher. Sticking Point is the fifth and final novel in the Logan Hunter series. While I absolutely love Logan and most of the characters who've shown up over the course of the series, I feel that this book brings her full-circle and seems a great place to leave her behind and move on to other projects.
Having said that, I am decorating for Christmas now, a little earlier than usual, but I'm not as fast as I once was and I have oodles of stuff. Christmas is my favorite time of year because it brings out the best in everyone and and provides many opportunities to hug and tell folks we love and appreciate them. Let me state here and now how much you guys mean to me. Stay tuned for a late January Sticking Point release. This cover is a photograph taken by North Carolina's own Jason Penland. Isn't it gorgeous?
Multi-genre author Susan Whitfield writes the Logan Hunter Mystery series: Genesis Beach, Just North of Luck,Hell Swamp, Sin Creek and Sticking Point. She authored Killer Recipes, a unique cookbook, and wrote a women's fiction, Slightly Cracked. She is currently writing an historical fiction titled Sprig of Broom. Susan interviews authors and industry experts on the blog. Web site: www.susanwhitfieldonline.com
Followers
Thursday, November 21, 2013
Monday, October 21, 2013
An interview with Mary L. Tabor
It
is my pleasure to introduce you to the online magazine
Shelf Unbound: What to read next in independent publishing,
a mag
we all need to know about, and to Mary L. Tabor, whom publisher and editor
Margaret Brown interviewed.
Shelf
Unbound book review magazine, a 2013
Maggie Award finalist for Best Digital-Only Publication, reaches more than
125,000 readers in the U.S. and in 59 other countries around the globe.
Subscriptions to Shelf Unbound are
free at www.shelfmediagroup.com.
Margaret Brown discovered Mary’s
novel at the Manhattan Book Expo in fall 2012 and was so taken by the book she
decided to profile Mary in the magazine. Brown has graciously agreed to allow
me to reprint that interview here.
But first a bit more about Mary: She’s the author
of the novel Who by Fire, the memoir (Re)Making Love: a sex after sixty story and the connected
short stories The Woman Who Never Cooked. She’s profiled in Poets&Writers, the Sept/Oct 2013 issue
in the article “From Corporate to Creative: Leaving a career to Pursue an MFA.”
Mary was honored at the Hyman S. & Freda Bernstein Jewish Literary
Festival’s Local Author Fair at the DCJCC on 16th Street, NW (1529
16th Street NW), on Sunday, October 13, at 7:00 PM. We all send her our heart-felt congratulations on this competitive achievement.
Program Co-Sponsors: Creative
Writing Program of the George Washington University English Department, The Writer’s Center, Writing
Program at Johns Hopkins University
Mary also has a radio show on Rare Bird Blogtalk Radio and
she interviewed Margaret Brown after the interview below ran. You can listen to
Margaret
Brown and Mary Tabor talking live.
Here’s Margaret’s interview with
Mary published originally 12 February/March 2013 Unbound 13:
Outer Banks Publishing Group
Shelf
Unbound: You have your main character creating the story of his deceased
wife’s affair through memory and invention. It’s a novel approach to
narrative — how did you arrive at it?
Mary L. Tabor: It’s
fascinating to me that you use these two words memory and
invention. Robert invents the story he didn’t know as he tries to
discover what his wife actually did while she was alive. Perhaps the
biggest risk I take in the novel is that use of invention. But I still
have to make clear to the reader that real time, what I call the
“now” or the present action of the story, is always operating, driving the
plot forward, driving my narrator Robert forward. As Robert and I invented
the story he didn’t know, my own memories invaded as they inevitably
will
for the writer of any story. Memory
Mary L. Tabor’s
ingeniously constructed
and emotionally rich
Who by Fire has a
middle-aged widower
traversing the downward
spiral of his marriage.
Highly recommended
for your book club.
by its
very nature is flawed, but the need to revisit memory over and over again is part
and parcel of being human and alive. Revisiting memory is the way we
search for meaning in our lives, for the narrative of who we are and who
we might become. In some sense, we’re inventing. But in fact we’re
searching for emotional truth. As writers, we aspire to find that. When fiction
rings true like a bell, we believe it.
Shelf:
The story reveals the fissures in two marriages. You’ve written about marriage before — what interests you
about the subject?
Tabor: The
ultimate challenge to our humanity gets played out day in and day out in
marriage. When E.M. Forster asserts in
the epigraph to Howard’s End, “Only connect…”, he sets the challenge for all of
us. In a committed relationship with another, whether there be a contract or
not, we romantics hope for transcendence in love. But, of course, our flawed
humanity that includes the baggage of our past gets played out in daily living.
It gets played out in the ordinary: buying the groceries, commuting, sweeping
up the messes that occur again and again. The only way through all that, I
think, is to believe that transcendence in love comes hand-in-hand with the
transformation of one’s self — not the other, not the beloved. But that’s only
part of my answer. Marriage as subject provides for me a solid place to search
for answers about the meaning of existence. Not to get too philosophical on
you, but the search for meaning is the reason I write — and read.
Shelf:
One of the main female characters is named Evan. I’m wondering why you chose a masculine name for her?
Tabor: Until
you asked me, I hadn’t realized Evan is a male name. The unconscious mind is
tricky, isn’t it? I love the character Evan more than anyone else in the book.
The answer might be as simple as this: As I’m heterosexual, perhaps I unconsciously
gave her that name.
Shelf:
You’ve taught creative writing. What did you learn in the process of writing
this book that
you would share with your students?
Tabor: Save
everything. I think most writers are hoarders. When a student has told me after
a workshop that he’s going to trash a story, I’ve reacted in horror, but until
I wrote this book, I’m not sure I fully
understood why. Many years ago, I read an article in the newspaper about a
baby’s bones found in a suitcase in the attic of a house after it had been sold
on Veazey Street in DC. I cut it out and saved it. Didn’t know why, just
couldn’t forget it. Later I wrote a short story about what might have happened
and titled it “The Suitcase.” That story, reenvisioned, became a key part of the
novel.
Shelf:
You recently posted on your blog: “I’ve written a novel entitled Who by Fire,
ten years in
the making, and I’m pretty sure not many folks will ever hear of it or read
it.” What would it mean to you if people did read it?
Tabor: I
know from all your questions that you understand the risks, the unusual
structure of this novel. If it ever got read, I would cry because I’d be so
indebted to those readers, as I am to you. I would cry in gratitude.
Sunday, October 13, 2013
Patricia Gligor's Mixed Messages
Patricia
Gligor is a Cincinnati native. She enjoys reading mystery/suspense novels,
touring and photographing old houses and traveling. Mixed Messages and Unfinished
Business, the first two novels in her Malone Mystery series, were published
by Post Mortem Press. Both books are available at Amazon, B&N and other
fine retailers. She has just sent Desperate
Deeds, the third book in her series, to her publisher. Look for it early
next year.
Visit her blog at: http://pat-writersforum.blogspot.com/
Welcome back to the
blog, Patricia. How has your environment affected your writing?
I live on the west side of Cincinnati, the setting for the
first three novels in my mystery series. When I think back to my childhood, I
realize that it’s no wonder I became a mystery writer. My parents, younger
brother and I lived in an old two-story house with all kinds of good places to
play Hide’n Seek. The basement was an especially scary place; the foundation
had thick stone walls, a fruit cellar and a coal bin. We had a large backyard
and, at the end of it, a woods extended as far as the eye could see with a
cemetery just barely visible in the distance. It was the perfect breeding
ground for a young girl, who loved to read Judy Bolton and Nancy Drew
mysteries, to develop a fertile imagination.
It certainly sounds
like it. How many books have you written?
I’ve written three books to date. I had attempted to write
two other novels (not mysteries) before I wrote Mixed Messages but neither of them sustained my interest long
enough for me to finish them. Now, the characters in my Malone mystery series
refuse to let me go.
I understand that. Give
a short synopsis of Mixed Messages.
“It’s estimated that there are at least twenty to thirty
active serial killers in the United States at any given time. There’s one on
the loose on the west side of Cincinnati.
It’s the week of Halloween and Ann Kern struggles with
several issues. Her primary concern is her marriage which, like her west side
neighborhood, is in jeopardy. Her husband is drinking heavily and his behavior
toward her is erratic. One minute, he’s the kind, loving man she married and,
the next minute, he’s cold and cruel.
Ann dismisses a psychic’s warning that she is in danger.
But, when she receives a series of ominous biblical quotes, she grows nervous
and suspicious of everyone, including her own husband.
As the bizarre and frightening events unfold, Ann discovers
a handmade tombstone marked with her name, pushing her close to the edge. Will
she be the Westwood Strangler’s next victim?”
That’s an interesting question. Before I began writing
novels, I wrote a lot of short stories. When I look back over them, I realize
there was a lot of “me” in the characters. I thought I had gotten that out of
my system but, as I develop the characters in my series, I see bits and pieces
of “me” in some of them. Sometimes, that’s a positive thing and other times . .
. . J
You know, that raises
an interesting question. My husband tells people he doesn’t know where are my
macabre characters come from and that he sleeps with one eye open. I sometimes
scare myself, having no idea where the graphic violence in some scenes came
from. For example, if Just North of Luck,
my second novel, became a movie, I’m not sure I could watch it. I have to
wonder how many other writers feel the same way about some of their work.
Do your characters
take on a life of their own? If so, which is your favorite?
Although I’m a plotter, my characters always have the final
say and, as I write, my outline becomes more of a guideline.
It’s difficult to pick a favorite character. I love
seventy-nine year old, Olivia, because, even though she’s been through a lot of
hard times in her life, she hasn’t let any of that make her bitter. She’s a
kind, generous, loving person.
I’m also partial to my main character, Ann Kern, who, as the
series progresses, grows from the shy, nervous wife of an alcoholic to a stronger,
more assertive woman.
Where do you store
ideas for later use: in your head, in a notebook, or on a spreadsheet?
I am a note-maker! I never trust storing ideas in my head.
They would rattle around in there and quite possibly end up lost. So, I keep
pen and paper handy at all times. When I first have an idea for a book, I jot
it down on a scrap of paper. As the stack of papers begins to grow, I condense
them onto one page, which becomes two, three, etc. Finally, I create my chapter
by chapter outline. Then, I begin to write. It’s a long process but it seems to
be the only one that works for me.
Can you tell us your future
writing goals/projects?
My next writing project will be the fourth book for my
Malone mystery series and there will be a change in locale. The Kern family
will visit Ann’s sister, Marnie, and her boyfriend, Sam, who live near Charleston,
South Carolina. It promises to be an exciting vacation!
At some point in the future, I want to write a standalone
novel or two, in addition to continuing my series.
Are your books
available in print and eBook formats?
Yes, Susan, they are. Here’s the link to my author page:
http://www.amazon.com/-/e/B007VDDUPQ
Thanks for inviting me to be here today.
Nice to have you
back. Continued success!
Saturday, October 5, 2013
An Invitation
I invite any followers of this blog to contact me about being a guest here. I welcome not only writers but other industry experts and avid readers. It's always nice to get all perspectives.
HAPPY FALL, Y'ALL !
Monday, September 30, 2013
Mary L. Ball's Stone of Destiny
Mary L. Ball enjoys weaving together Inspirational Suspense
and Mystery Novels blended with romance.
She is a member of ACFW and lives in North Carolina between
the wondrous mountains and beautiful beaches. When Mary isn’t writing or babysitting her grandsons, she
enjoys supporting her husband’s ministry, fishing, hiking or reading a good
novel. I had the pleasure of meeting Mary in person a few years ago.
Welcome, Mary and congratulations on the new book!
Thanks, Susan.
How many books have you written?
I have three books out. Escape to Big Fork Lake, my debut
novel and Stone of Destiny –my newest released. Prism Book Group publishes
those novels. I also have a non-fiction eBook titled The Writers Handbook of
Online Promotion
Give a short synop of your most recently published book.
Can a mysterious ring change lives?
Taylor Harrison has given up on everything but her work. The
youngest CEO of Mugful’s Beverage Company, her life is complete. That is, until
her grandmother asks her to oversee renovations at the family home and find the
missing heirloom.
First contact with what she believes is an insignificant
ring, lost for fifty years, sends her life spinning. Taylor experiences strange
dreams. Feelings surface; she doesn't understand; thoughts that should remain
unspoken, voiced.
Taylor’s emotional journey begins, testing a heart as cold
as the ring itself.
Is this a fairy-tale or her soul, reaching out for a life
she can only find through faith and trust in God?
How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in the
book?
This book is totally fiction except for the faith aspect,
that part I draw from myself.
What challenges did you face while writing this book?
Some may see this novel as a bit odd for an Inspirational
read, but I wanted readers to get a sense of the spiritual power attained by
faith and prayer. It was a challenge for me to bring that knowledge out and
have the book focusing on dreams and visions.
Can you tell us your future writing goals/projects?
I’m working on a fiction novel about a man and his struggle
to find the strength to fight alcoholism.
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
My website is http://marylouwrites.weebly.com/
Also, you can find me on Face Book at: https://www.facebook.com/pages/Inspirational-author-Mary-L-Ball
Are your books available in print and ebook formats?
My books are available in both print and eBook.
Escape to Big Fork Lake
Amazon
http://goo.gl/cr3Ah
Barnes & Noble
http://goo.gl/Yj4T9
Prism Book Group
http://goo.gl/uvl9t
All romance Ebooks
Stone of Destiny
Amazon
http://goo.gl/yWs5pW
Barnes & Noble
http://goo.gl/XheXrP
All Romance Ebooks
http://goo.gl/Beir6s
Prism Book Group
http://www.prismbookgroup.com/stoneofdestiny.html
The Writers Handbook of online Promotion is available as
eBook at: http://goo.gl/2XFpga
Good luck with the book, Mary, and keep in touch!
Monday, September 23, 2013
Susan Sloate's STEALING FIRE
HOW DO YOU RECOGNIZE YOUR SOULMATE?
In glittery 1980’s Los Angeles, Beau Kellogg, a brilliant lyricist now reduced to writing advertising jingles, yearns for one last Broadway hit to compensate for his miserable marriage and disappointing life.
Amanda Harary, a young singer out of sync with her contemporaries, dreams of appearing in Broadway musicals while she holds down a day job at a small New York hotel.
When the two meet in a late-night phone conversation over the hotel switchboard, it’s the beginning of something neither has ever found—an impossible situation that will bring them both unexpected success, untold joy and piercing heartache... until they learn that some connections, however improbable, are meant to last forever.
STEALING FIRE is, at its heart, a story for romantics everywhere, who believe in the transformative power of love. Today I welcome my friend, Susan Sloate, back to the blog after a long absence.
Wow! Interesting story, for sure.
Can you tell us your future writing goals/projects?
There’s an upcoming sequel to FORWARD TO CAMELOT, where my heroine Cady (who helps save JFK from assassination in the first book) takes on her next challenge – competing as a celebrity on a live television ballroom-dance competition. But the time travel she did in CAMELOT has affected what’s happening in the world now, and it’s somehow connected with the fact that a lot of people on her show are turning up dead …
Susan Sloate is the author or co-author of 20 published
books, including 17 young-adult books and the 2003 #6 Amazon bestseller,
FORWARD TO CAMELOT (with Kevin Finn), which took honors in 3 literary
competitions and was optioned by a Hollywood company for film production. Her
most recent novel, STEALING FIRE, hit #2 on the Amazon bestseller list within
24 hours, more than a month before its official publication date. She invented
a new genre – the self-help novel –
for REALIZING YOU (with Ron Doades), which will be published later this year.
FORWARD TO CAMELOT (50th Anniversary Edition) will be published in
late October and will include new material added to the original manuscript.
Susan lives outside Charleston, South Ccarolina. Visit her online at http://susansloate.com.
Welcome, Susan. Give a short synopsis of
your most recent book.
Susan, thank you for inviting me to your blog this week! I
really appreciate the chance to connect with you and your readers!
My most recent book, STEALING FIRE, is a love story between
two unlikely soulmates – a Broadway lyricist/librettist now living in L.A.,
writing advertising jingles and yearning for more one hit in a theater now dominated
by Andrew Lloyd Webber, and a young woman working toward a singing career on
Broadway while holding down a day job in a small New York hotel. They clash in
their first conversations over the phone but later begin to talk in depth and
discover that each has something to offer the other.
How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in the book?
How much of yourself is hidden in the characters in the book?
It’s taken me awhile to realize – because I write in
multiple genres – that the unifying factor in all my fiction seems to be that
the heroine is always some facet of me! (Embarrassing, but true. And I’m sorry
to say it’s not hidden – most of my friends can spot it at once!) Amanda in
STEALING FIRE is the young me; Cady in FORWARD TO CAMELOT is the idealized
version of me – we have lots of similarities but she’s also more glamorous,
more resourceful, more courageous – everything I’d love to be. Lindy in THE
CAMPAIGN TRAIL (a novel I’m working on) is me at a more mature level. I had no
idea for a long time that that was the case. No wonder I was drawn to write all
those stories!!
What challenges did you face while writing this book?
What challenges did you face while writing this book?
STEALING FIRE presented a lot of challenges, because it took
me so long to write. I had a relationship very similar to Beau and Amanda’s
when I was in my mid-20’s, and it was so painful that I started writing about
it. I didn’t have anything in mind at the time; just sat down in front of my
IBM Selectric (yes, really) and started typing. This was spring of 1983, and
the book is finally being published now, in the summer of 2013 – a 30-year
gestation! Crazy!
Anyway, I wrote the way I often write when I’m starting a
project – just wrote whatever scene came to mind, no matter where in the story
it actually took place. I had no big overview in my mind, just focused on
whatever scene I was working on. When I got my first computer in 1988, I
re-typed the whole manuscript into the computer – but in those days Word files
could only hold so much data, so I put a chapter in each file. What that really
meant was that I had no idea how much material I was accumulating. And at some
point, I stopped writing because the relationship was long over, the guy was
out of my life and I figured I didn’t need to write anymore. And I actually
didn’t know how to go on with the book from there. But I never deleted the
files. (Writers don’t get rid of anything we write, even if it’s our first
kindergarten doodles.) At that point, the challenge was not understanding the
relationship enough to stand back and comment on it.
I transferred the files to whatever new computer I got, but
left them alone, and then around 1997 found them in a cache of old files on a
new computer. At that point I was able to combine the files into one, and
incredibly, I had 275 pages of unfinished manuscript there – way too many to
discard, and I loved the novel, unfinished and raw as it was. But I still
didn’t know how to finish it, and since at that point I thought I’d learned the
lessons of the relationship, didn’t see the point of trying. I wasn’t throwing
the files out, but I still didn’t know what to do with them.
Then in December 2004, I actually spoke once more to the guy
I’d been in love with. He was dying of cancer, but after 20 years of silence,
within half a minute on the phone things were just the same as they’d always
been – all the chemistry, all the excitement, was right there. Amazing. It
brought back joy, but also a lot of pain. And during that short period – about
six months that we were in touch – I wrote more pages on STEALING FIRE, because
I was beginning to see more of his point of view and learn more of his life,
which he’d always kept hidden from me.
Wow! Interesting story, for sure.
He died in 2007, and later that year I heard about the
Amazon Breakthrough Novel Award contest, which was being run for the first
time. I could enter STEALING FIRE – if I could get it in coherent shape in
about a week. Well, in that week, I cut 100 pages, wrote 100 new pages, did
bridges between certain sections, and turned the manuscript in to the contest
about 30 minutes before it closed. It still needed work, but it was at that
point substantially finished. And being older and having lived through the last
of the relationship, I felt I understood much more of the dynamics involved.
The novel made the first cut in the 2008 contest, and when I
entered it in the 2012 ABNA contest it made Quarter-Finalist (top 5%). I kept
thinking I had to finish and publish it, but until this year, it didn’t happen.
Then I finally resolved to get this off my plate once and for all, and when
Drake Valley Press approached me to publish it, it seemed like the perfect
partnership.
What did you bring to the writing of this book from your own life?
What did you bring to the writing of this book from your own life?
Of course I brought the relationship itself, with all that
chemistry and excitement and tenderness. I also brought a lifelong love of the
musical theater. My mother had been a singer herself, had lived in New York
during the golden era of Broadway musicals – the late ‘40s, early ‘50s – and
wanted to sing on Broadway. I grew up on her stories of life in New York at
that time, along with all the show scores she knew, and as I grew up and found
new scores, I learned those as well. I can still sing most of Rodgers &
Hammerstein, Rodgers & Hart, Cole Porter, Gershwin, Lerner & Loewe,
Jule Styne – this stuff is in my blood.
What’s interesting too is that it’s also in my family. On my father’s side, there was a
guy named Fred, who worked in a shoe store but really wanted to write song
lyrics. Well, my family didn’t get this – they all started their own
businesses, made products, did well financially that way. A songwriter? What
was that?
Everyone told Fred to stick with the shoe store job – he
might someday become, oh, the manager, or something. But Fred had a partner who
wrote songs, and they worked with this young girl who had lots of energy and a
great voice. They did this off-Broadway show together that flopped.
But the family stopped teasing Fred the night he got them
house seats for his new Broadway musical, CABARET. It was a huge hit, and Fred
and his partner, John Kander, went on to write CHICAGO, ALL THAT JAZZ, FUNNY
LADY and a song called “New York, New
York”, which did pretty well. The woman who introduced that song was the
young girl he’d worked with all those years ago, Liza Minnelli. And Kander
& Ebb are considered legends in the musical theater.
What do you think is the greatest lesson you’ve learned about writing so far? What advice can you give new writers?
If I have to choose one piece of advice, I’ll side with Stephen King: learn your craft. Learn what the components of a story are, and find stories that do those well and those that do them badly – and understand the difference. Then work at doing it yourself, and keep doing it, to refine your craft and constantly get better.
What do you think is the greatest lesson you’ve learned about writing so far? What advice can you give new writers?
If I have to choose one piece of advice, I’ll side with Stephen King: learn your craft. Learn what the components of a story are, and find stories that do those well and those that do them badly – and understand the difference. Then work at doing it yourself, and keep doing it, to refine your craft and constantly get better.
It is not professional to say that
you’ve got an artistic temperament and you just want to fly by the seat of your
pants and be creative. You certainly should do that at times – it’s great for
you creatively – but you should also know how to spell. Know how to punctuate.
These are the tools of your craft. Don’t leave them to someone else (who might
also get them wrong, and make you look like an amateur). I’m very picky about
how words look on a page – in fact, I’m convinced that part of the pleasure of
the reader’s experience is how he or she sees
the words on the page – so I’m careful about paragraphing, sentence structure,
all that stuff. It’s not thrilling, but I want readers to want to read my books
over and over, and if the word placement on the page enhances that experience,
I think they will. It’s a pleasure to
provide a good reading experience for my readers.
I also suggest always that you
understate rather than overstate – and speaking of that, don’t ever use the
word ‘state’! It implies terrific weight to the words being stated, so unless
you have a sentence like “The meaning of life is ______,” he stated, I don’t
think you can ever use it well.
We all know how important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and online?
We all know how important promoting our work has become. How do you get the word out both off and online?
I post regularly on Facebook, less
often on Twitter and LinkedIn (I know I should, but I don’t, alas). I also blog
– my blog site is http://susansloate.wordpress.com,
and the title of my blog is Let the Word Go Forth.
I’m starting virtual book tours – a
chance to visit a lot of websites, each for one day, where readers gather to
learn about new books. I’ll be doing a couple of those tours in September and
October – a new experience for me. I’m guest blogging here and with some other
author friends. Also looking for both professional and customer reviews for
Amazon, B&N and Goodreads. And I’m speaking at conferences and libraries in
North and South Carolina.
Can you tell us your future writing goals/projects?
There’s an upcoming sequel to FORWARD TO CAMELOT, where my heroine Cady (who helps save JFK from assassination in the first book) takes on her next challenge – competing as a celebrity on a live television ballroom-dance competition. But the time travel she did in CAMELOT has affected what’s happening in the world now, and it’s somehow connected with the fact that a lot of people on her show are turning up dead …
I want to finish THE CAMPAIGN TRAIL, and I also have some
young-adult fiction series I want to write – one is a boys’ mystery series based
on the personalities of my two sons, and one is about the world of 1950’s New
York, which my mother impressed on me in childhood. So there’s a lot on my
plate in the next couple of years.
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
I love visitors to my site and I’m happy to answer further
questions!
Are your books available in print and ebook formats?
Are your books available in print and ebook formats?
STEALING FIRE, FORWARD TO CAMELOT and REALIZING YOU will all
be available in all eBook formats, as well as in paperback.
Here’s the eBook link for STEALING FIRE on Amazon:
link for the paperback version of STEALING FIRE on Amazon:
http://www.amazon.com/ Stealing-Fire-Susan-Sloate/dp/ 1935970127/ref=sr_1_1_bnp_1_ pap?ie=UTF8&qid=1375469747&sr= 8-1&keywords=stealing+fire+ susan+sloate
photography by Vicki Faith
http://www.amazon.com/photography by Vicki Faith
Monday, September 16, 2013
Margaret Blake
Margaret was born in Manchester, England, but has lived on
the north west coast now for twenty years. She and husband, John moved around
somewhat and lived in France for a time, Margaret lived in the USA. The
greatest sadness in her life has been coping with the death of her husband. Her
greatest joy has been found with her son, his wife and family.
I started writing in l978 for a British publisher and wrote
14 books for them, I had a break from writing and then started again writing
for Whiskey Creek Press. The total of books I have written is 30 and I have
another two out next year.
Give a short synop of your most recently published book.
Under a Grecian Moon is a contemporary romance. “When Lander
Drakos contacts Evie she can’t think why. When she meets him she discovers a
terrible secret. Once more in Lander’s world she can’t help but feel attracted
to him, yet there is betrayal and more devastating secrets. And then there is
the child, Helena, who must be protected at all costs.
Do your characters take on a life of their own? If so, which
is your favorite?
Quite often they do. I am usually fondest of my latest
characters. I always fall in love with my heroes; I don’t think I could expect
my readers to do if I don’t! I was very much in love with my hero in Tilly’s
Trials, as were a lot of readers. I don’t generally like perfect people but he
is about as perfect as it is possible to be without being boring!
Do you travel to do research or for inspiration? Can you
share some special places with us?
I have to confess that although half of this novel is set on
a Greek Island, I have never been to Greece! I was looking out of my window on
a cold and drab day and decided to take myself somewhere warm. That was my
inspiration for this novel. I have set a couple of novels in Spain and have
never been there! Florida has been a great inspiration for me; I love the
climate and the atmosphere. Magical.
What do you think is the greatest lesson you’ve learned
about writing so far? What advice can you give new writers?
I think the hardest lesson I have learned, rather than the
greatest, is to keep going. It doesn’t matter how many times you get knocked
back you have to carry on. That is a lesson that all aspiring writers should
learn. One of the greatest lessons I have learned is to believe in what you are
working on at the time. If you don’t believe in it, no one else will … if you
have a moments doubt, then leave it alone.
Can you tell us your future writing goals/projects?
I have two new novels out. One is a re-print of a previous
novel and the other is a new romantic suspense called The Flower Girls. I am
working on two new books, one an historical romance and the other a romantic
suspense. At the moment I am trying to get the hang on my new computer. That is
interrupting my flow. I am not the most technical minded of people.
Where can folks learn more about your books and events?
Are your books available in print and ebook formats? (please
provide the buy link for easy reader accessibility)
My books are available in print and as an e-book and are
available from www.whiskeycreekpress.com
or www.amazon.com. Many of my British
novels, published by Robert Hale Limited, can be found in libraries in the UK.
As well as from www.amazoncom (these are
hardbacks).
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