Archive for the 'Writing' Category
That’s what deadlines do, apparently! They make you disappear while you figure out the intricacies of emotion, plot, and resolutions to all problems so you can have the HEA. I’m coming down to the wire (and The End) and working pretty steadily. I also have to make time for a little bit of a personal life. In fact, the hubby and I watched a program on the Travel Channel the other day about the best hot dogs in the US. Oh dear. I’m not much of a hot dog eater normally, but I’ve had such a craving the last few days. And my local grocery store sells Nathan’s hot dogs, which are Coney Island dogs and were featured on the show. We had them last night — and OMG, heavenly!
There is also, apparently, a seriously cool place in Atlanta called The Varsity which has been selling hot dogs for decades. Now I want to make a quick run to Atlanta for a hot dog. Is that crazy?
Aside from craving hot dogs, I’ve also found time to mail out books — so if you won a copy of SPANISH MAGNATE, RED-HOT REVENGE from me, it’s on the way!! I hope you’ll let me know what you think.
I did promise to pick a winner from last week’s giveaway! Without further ado, my scientifically approved method has drawn Mari from the comments.
Mari, please email me your contact info and I’ll get a signed copy in the mail to you!
Who likes hot dogs? What do you like on them? I’m a mustard and relish gal, but I’ve had a Chicago dog before and loved all that stuff they cram on top of the dog. My favorite kinds of hot dogs, btw, are all beef in casings (like Nathan’s). Not much of an Oscar Meyer/Ballpark/etc fan. What about you?
Posted in Winners, Writing | 6 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Mari - Nicole S - Keli Gwyn - Lynn Raye Harris -
I’m working on Book 3, getting deep into character and motivation, and generally having fun exploring the relationship between these two volatile people. And when I ran across this picture, the light bulb went off — this is my hero. Cristiano is strong, sexy, and tortured by the past. And he’s absolutely determined to get what he wants from the heroine — and to leave her with nothing when he’s done.
Oh be still my heart! Wounded heroes are so sexy to write.
Yeah, I love this job.
In other news, the website is inching closer to reveal day! I’m so excited about it, and can’t wait to share it with you all! There will be a new website, blog, and newsletter. And when it goes live, I’ll give away some goodies.
One last thing — my book is up for pre-order on Amazon, but now it has a cover — and that makes me delighted to share the link with you!
Posted in Books, Heroes, Hunks, Inspiration, Writing | 7 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Lynn Raye Harris - Problem Child - Playground Monitor - Kathy - croco2511 -
I’m working on Book 3 and I could tell something was missing. As much as I loved the characters, and the situation I’d gotten them into (oh it is delicious, but I cannot tell you!), there was some niggling little thing bugging me. Something wasn’t right.
Fortunately, my editor saw it too. And after a conversation with her yesterday, I now have new direction. What I was missing, apparently, was some deeper angst. In a short category novel, those backgrounds are key. What happened to these people in the past to make them who they are now? What about their pasts prevents them from being together or from seeing they are right for each other? What must they help each other to realize before they can live happily ever after?
It seems straightforward enough, but it rarely is. My characters are real to me, and until I know what their problems truly are, it’s impossible to just make a bunch of stuff up that doesn’t fit. Seriously. I guess that sounds silly, but it’s true.
My editor hit on something perfect that fit the hero so well I wondered how I hadn’t realized it about him before. Combine that with some other things I learned about him, and with the heroine’s background, and we’ve got one dark book. But I’m up for the challenge! I’m looking forward to the revisions to the first three chapters, and what will happen as I move forward from there. I’m excited about it again, and not worried that something is missing. It’s a great feeling.
And, once again, there’s a deadline staring me in the face. So time to get busy!
How do you know when you have all your elements in place? Do character backgrounds take you a while to learn? Or do you know everything right away?
Posted in Writing | 2 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Problem Child - Lynn Raye Harris -
I’ll be wrestling the characters of the newest book this week, so may not be around too much. I’ve got them in a pickle, but the trouble is they are still hiding information from me so I don’t quite know what they’re going to do. This situation cannot continue. I, as the writer, MUST know what’s what. Until I do, they aren’t getting out of the difficult place I’ve stuck them in. I’m pretty sure I’m going to win, though not sure how long it’ll take….
Posted in Writing | 2 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Kathy - Lacey Devlin -
Don’t forget to comment on the one year anniversary post below for a chance to win a prize!
Okay, so I can’t believe it’s Monday already. Probably because I blogged on Saturday (see post immediately beneath this one for link). And I have nothing new to talk about! I’m still so excited about my fab cover, and yes I will be putting it in the sidebar very soon and on my website.
I could just stare at it all day! I love my Alejandro. So sexy. Ahem, where was I? Oh yes, nothing to talk about. The weekend raced by. Hubby and I went out to do errands on Saturday, then went to my parents’ house for dinner yesterday. Suddenly, it’s Monday. Hubby is back at work and I’m staring at the WIP. Characters are stuck in a house together, alone, and sparks are flying. I suppose I should really be listening in and typing, come to think of it.
One of my friends went to Costa Rica to finish her book before deadline. I’m wishing I could do that. Instead, I’ll have to pretend. *sigh* Time to whip out the tropical poster and play island music, I guess…..
If you could go anywhere to finish your book, where would it be? Or where have you gone that was good for the muse? (When I lived in Hawaii, I didn’t write nearly as much as I should have — found the beaches and lifestyle distracting, in fact. LOL!)
Posted in Celebrations, General, Travel, Writing | Leave a Comment »
Today is the one year anniversary of the call that I’d won the Harlequin Presents Instant Seduction contest. Much has changed in the past year! Come on one over to I Heart Presents and see what I have to say about the journey. (And get the inside scoop on the genesis of my second book.)
Leave me a comment here and I’ll put you in for a drawing. Not sure what I’m giving away yet, but I promise it will be good! Perhaps I will let the winner choose…. $10 gift card to bookstore of choice? Scrumptious bath set? A trio of brand new Harlequin Presents? What would you like? (No, not a winning lottery ticket!)
You have until Monday at midnight CDT to enter.
Breaking News: my RED-HOT cover is up over at IHP!!!! In celebration, I’ll pick TWO winners instead of one.
Posted in Celebrations, Contests, Writing | 17 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Patricia - Keli Gwyn - Mark J. - Suzanne - Cari Quinn -
A recent incident shocked me enough to realize that I need to remind any aspiring authors reading this to make SURE you vet the information you’re getting before launching into a plan of action for conferences and/or submissions. Sometimes we accept the advice of well-meaning but misinformed people without knowing they are misinformed. It always pays to check for yourself.
While you’d think it wouldn’t need to be said, here are some things you do NOT want to do:
1. Do NOT stalk editors and/or agents. Planning your time so you can “bump” into someone, and then refusing to go away, is not the correct course of action. Of course you need to be prepared, because there will be those elevator meetings sometimes, but don’t haunt the restroom door in the hopes of running into someone. Or the buffet line.
2. Do NOT misspell names on your query. Names are kind of unforgivable since you should be able to check and double check the correct spelling — especially if you’ve gotten a business card from the individual. I once got a letter from a utility company that referred to me as Mrs. Barris. Jarring. And if you want to compare yourself to another author, use caution — don’t say J.R. Rawling when you mean J.K. Rowling.
(Seriously, this should be obvious, but you’d be surprised.)
3. Do NOT take as gospel every word said by the woman sitting next to you at your RWA chapter meeting — even if she does seem to know a lot. If you’re a PRO member, download those PRO booklets and read, read, read. Then ask questions of published authors (or experienced PROs) you TRUST to give you good advice. Check and double check, because if someone tells you to stand outside the restroom door or linger in the buffet line looking for a publishing professional, it’s probably not the best advice.
(I did once listen to something someone told me when I was very green, even though my gut told me otherwise. The result was a rejection, of course. This was a long time ago, and believe me I learned.)
4. Do NOT send the same query for the same book to the same agent who just rejected it. Rework the query or submit somewhere else. Wish I could find the link, but I read a post last week about someone who kept submitting a query for an adult novel (not that kind of adult!) to a children’s book agent. She finally got frustrated and wrote back telling him to stop because she didn’t represent that type of book, which she had politely tried to tell him over the last several months. His reply? That she was an agent and therefore he would keep querying her because it was his job to query agents about his book. Talk about clueless! And, oh yeah, agents know each other. You can bet his name is now making a viral loop through Agentland as we speak. And not in a positive way.
5. Do NOT think you know it all. I’ve met these people and it’s frustrating as heck. I know I don’t know everything, but I’m pretty sure this stuff I just said is true. But you be sure and double check it before listening to me, you hear?
What kind of crazy advice have you ever gotten? Good advice? What sort of horrible hi-jinks have you seen at conferences? We’ve all heard the manuscript under the door story, but have you ever seen its equivalent? Thankfully, I haven’t, but I know at least one person who I think would do it. Sadly, some people don’t listen.
Posted in Conference, Rants, Submissions, Writing | 7 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Lynn Raye Harris - Smarty Pants - Jean - Kathy - Lacey Devlin -
I can’t think of a single thing to post today. I’ve not been doing much, just reading for friends, thinking about where my story is going, cleaning out the refrigerator, grocery shopping — you know, mundane stuff. I think I need to be going 90 miles a minute to have any focus, you know? Isn’t that weird?
But I think it’s true. I always do my best work under the metaphorical gun. Give me pressure, and I’m off to the races. Tell me I have all the time in the world, and I’m lollygagging along on a pleasure cruise. I need deadlines and structure to succeed. I think many of us do.
So, yeah, I have some tasks that need done, but I also need to set myself a deadline while I wait for my editor to tell me if my latest proposal would be better served as firestarter. Best to work forward steadily and maybe get more accomplished than all this thumb twiddling is doing.
But, good news, my chapter meeting is the weekend! That always motivates me.
What motivates you? Do you need pressure? Or do you accomplish just as much when you have a lot of leisure time?
Posted in Writing | 3 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Carol Burnside - Lynn Raye Harris -
So did you watch Castle last night? It’s about a best-selling bad boy mystery writer who ends up partnering with a female detective to solve a case. Someone is murdering people based on his books, so this is how he gets involved. And when they solve that case, he gets himself a position accompanying the detective for research purposes because he killed off his fictional detective and she’s the inspiration for a new one (so the series can continue, of course). (If you missed the episode and want to watch, you can do so for free here.)
Frankly, though it was over the top, I liked it. And I think it has potential. But what’s totally hilarious to me, and to all the writers I know, is the portrayal of the writing life. Nathan Fillion, aka Richard Castle, is a bad boy rock star kind of writer. He’s got book launch parties in swanky places, lots of money, a pen with which he signs bimbos’ chests (do they really read?), and a bad attitude about his fame. He’s friends with the mayor, and he sits around playing cards with Stephen J. Cannell and James Patterson. (And someone said the woman at the table was Faye Kellerman.)
He’s so well connected he can get anything done, even leapfrog the slow and frustrating process of getting CSI results from the lab. Which of course pisses off the detective. He has money to burn and enough self-love to make him charming in spite of himself. (And, we suspect, a core of misery.) Somehow, in between all this partying and fun, he’s managed to write a whole lot of bestselling mysteries that are known for their attention to detail. Even the medical examiner is a fan.
But what I really love is the writing = glamour aspect. The portrayal of Castle’s life just reinforces what the public already believes about writers. Rich, connected, got it made. I ROFL, of course, because I am none of these things. People at my husband’s work actually thought he was going to retire now that I’ve sold a book. Excuse me while I roll around on the floor in hysterics.
MOST writers don’t live this charming, exotic life. We are ordinary people with ordinary incomes. Being a published writer doesn’t make you rich. It makes you like everyone else out there, worrying about expenses and hoping to make enough to cover them. Or, in my case since I have a wonderfully supportive hubby with a good job, making enough to cover my writing expenses, save for our retirement, and take some lovely vacations.
Even if I had Castle’s money and connections, I doubt I’d want to do any of that stuff he does. I’d much rather be holed up in my office, working on my next book, than chasing criminals or attending ritzy parties.
Did you watch Castle? What did you think? Do you like shows about writers? My mom loves Murder She Wrote. Jessica seems to have a more ordinary life by contrast, and yet everyone the poor woman knows always gets killed. The shows are campy, but fun. Castle was a bit campy too, but I think it can get better. (My first choice, of course, would be to have Fillion back on the set of Firefly, but I don’t think that will ever happen now. Darn TV execs. They’ll probably cancel this one too, just as soon as people fall in love with it.)
Posted in Television, Writing | 8 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Playground Monitor - Angel - Lynn Raye Harris - Carol Burnside - Problem Child -
I’m still feeling at loose ends, and in spite of the good advice to relax and fill the well, I find it difficult to do so. So is it any wonder I’m working on Chapter 4 even before I hear from my editor? *g*
In honor of the number four, I’m sharing four things with you.
1) A FABULOUS post from Presents author Penny Jordan on an article she read that validated many of her feelings about the stories she writes. And all I can say, having read the article and her post, is YES. This is exactly what I feel about my heroes and the stories I create (and it’s as true for the romantic suspense I was writing as it is for my Presents stories).
2) Agent Nathan Bransford had a wonderful post on Thursday about the Ten Commandments for a Happy Writer. I really loved this and wanted to share!
3) The Guess the Bookshelf contest is still going on! My shelves are there, so come on over and see if you can figure it out. There are prizes!
4) Presents author Trish Morey has a free read on eHarlequin! Come read The Italian Billionaire’s Bride.
Posted in Blogging, Business, Contests, Reading, Writing | 4 Comments »
Recent Comments by: Kathy - Tami Brothers - Problem Child - Lynn Raye Harris -
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