Saturday, April 16, 2011

Review of SHOW NO MERCY by Brian Drake

 3 of 5 stars

I was excited to read this book by Brian Drake because I had read Justified Sins by this author and enjoyed it.  His portrayal of one of the characters, Mr. Pierce, captivated me.  It was masterful writing.

SHOW NO MERCY is a classic spy story.  We have the good agents, a rogue agent and, of course, the bad guys -- terrorists who want to blow up the world. Unfortunately, the main character, Michael Dodge, doesn't show the depth I expected. I wanted to know what made Michael tick. The author gives up snippets, but for me, they were not enough to let me truly understand Michael and his motivations.

Michael Dodge has been assigned to find out what's the story with Harry Ames, a respected CIA agent, who appears to have gone rogue. Complicating the story is Tracy Ames, Harry's daughter, also an agent, and assigned with Michael to find Harry. Further, Harry seems to have been a somewhat surrogate father to Michael.  With such conflicting emotions, I wanted to know how Michael felt.  How would you feel if you had orders to kill the only father you've ever known?  I was also disappointed that the author did not define Michael and Tracy's relationship.  Were they more like brother and sister or was there something more there?  Tidbits throughout the book didn't clarify their relationship.

Don't get me wrong, the story is not all bad.  Michael and Tracy's globe hopping trying to find Harry is thrilling and there are enough twists and turns thrown into the story, that you will want to know what happens.  Will Michael get to the terrorists in time before they blow up an American city?  Will he find Harry?  And what's with Harry?  Is he deep undercover or has he had enough of rules and regulations and joined the terrorists for the chance at a bucket load of money?  Read the story and find out!



Friday, April 15, 2011

New Interview for me!

Today, I'm being featured over at JE Taylor's blog, Musings & Rants.  Thanks so much JE!  It was a fun interview.  I talk about the Otharia books, but the best part was JE's top ten:

JET:All right - now that I’ve hammered you with the big questions, let’s tackle my favorite (and geeky) quick ten. . . starting with: Paper or Plastic?
Debra: Reusable canvas

JET:Steak or Tofu?
Debra: Is fish an option? 

JET:Beach or Mountains? 
Debra: Definitely the Beach.

JET:Country or Rock-n-Roll? 
Debra: Rick-n-Roll for sure.

JET:Leather or Lace?
Debra: Lace

JET:Angels or Demons?
Debra: Demons, they’re much more interesting

JET:Paper or Digital?
Debra: Paper to edit, digital to write

JET: Silent Film Classics or Cheesy B Rated Horror?
Debra: Neither

JET:Twilight or True Blood
Debra: True Blood rules!

JET:Coffee or Tea?
Debra: Definitely coffee – can I throw in a latte as well.

You can read the full interview here: http://jetaylor75.blogspot.com/2011/04/dishing-it-up-with-debra-l-martin.html

E-Covers that Sell!



by Rebecca Forster

I doubt this will come as a surprise, but ‘pretty’ sells. So does intriguing, shocking, soothing and sexy. That’s why I spent the last three weeks sweating over cover designs for my backlist romances and redesigning my thriller covers - all of which I hope you'll be downloading to your E-reader of choice someday. But today the topic is E-covers.

Why, you may wonder, did this exercise in cover design create such angst? After all, nobody will run their thumb over the richly embossed type, check the weight of the stock or touch it in a bookstore. This isn’t a ‘real’ cover on a ‘real’ book and that is exactly the point. These covers are more important than a paper cover because they will live on in perpetuity.

In this new publishing reality, authors who have backlists and don’t own the rights to their covers must now become designers; indie authors who have never had the benefit of seeing their work transformed into a visual face a daunting task of identifying the soul of their books. Bottom line, unlike paper, an E-cover's impact will be farther reaching than any of us can even imagine.

In the old days an author might reproduce their cover image on bookmarks and mugs. In this brave new world, E-covers pop up as thumbnails on Facebook, Linked-In and other social media posts. They are broadcast to readers of blogs and reviewers who promote your work. An E-cover makes a statement on your own website. An E-book cover is brought up full-size and full color on most readers. An E- cover sets the tone for my book in a way that a paper cover never could because I – the author – have designed it and that is the truly exquisite bottom line.**

No longer am I at the mercy of a New York art director working off a synopsis of the book I spent months writing. Never again will I have a cover where Lady Justice had a sex change and became a sword-toting Roman guy. I have seen the last of a beautiful ocean on the cover of my book that is set in the high desert of California. Hurrah! I have taken the beaches of cover design, planted my flag and you can too.

I must confess that initially I was like a young soldier rushing into war without realizing how important the battle was. I lucked out with my Witness Series covers but others looked amateurish, weak and unmemorable. I had that revelation as I readied my romance backlist for E-publication. I was determined to make my covers as easily identifiable as my writing style. Faced with the prospect of creating a minimum of 8 new covers, I made a plan. I studied E-covers of books I admired and those on the top seller lists. I began to experiment. I realized that like a first draft of a book my covers were not perfect the first time out. I began to understand that I had to kick everything up a notch to get noticed: visuals, color, and content.

Old Version

New Version

The new covers now reflect the theme of each book or are evocative of the mood of that work. With the romances and women’s fiction in particular I tried to limit the use of full-on portrait photography in order not to inhibit the romantic reader’s imagination. For me, blocking and color worked for the romances. For other authors, flowers and pastels might be the key to success. For my thrillers, I decided to go darker with ominous and/or graphic images. Though there are no hard and fast rules, here are some guidelines that worked for me:

• Clean is better than fussy
• People (especially parts of people) are intriguing***
• Experimenting is good. Odd colors and disparate type faces can work together and create drama
• The covers should reflect the tone of the book
• Slugs should be tight and to the point
• Spend a little money on stock photos (I use ‘small’).
• Plug in image search words that aren’t obvious.
• Use PowerPoint portrait setting for your design. The pixel height and width will be perfect for uploading to Amazon, PubIt! and Smashwords.

So, Heck Yeah! Get on top of the the covers. Your E-career will thank you for it.****

*Check out all my covers at http://www.rebeccaforster.com
**Even if you had a designer, they worked at your direction. Own that cover!
***See The Reckless Ones – my favorite partial body shot.
****The same thoughts hold true for E-packaging!

       

Thursday, April 14, 2011

More Funnies...

Some perks to being home!

Whenever I have a chance to be at home during the week, my favorite show to watch is Ellen.  She's hysterical and has some of the funniest sections like "Mindy's Reality Roundup."  This is Ellen's housekeeper who just wings her opinion about shows she obviously doesn't watch, but she's so cute!

Anybody else watch Ellen?

Wednesday, April 13, 2011

Interview with Jeffrey A Carver


Briefly describe your journey in writing your latest book project.
I'm currently working on a hard SF series called The Chaos Chronicles.  It started with Neptune Crossing, back in the mid 1990s, and the fourth volume, Sunborn, was published just a couple of years ago. The print versions were published by Tor Books, and they also published the ebook edition of Sunborn.  But I went indie with my own ebooks of the first three books. (Actually, I started by putting them out for free, in preparation for the publication of Sunborn. They'd been out of print for a while, and I wanted new readers to be able to get up to speed on the story before the fourth novel came out.) Those free downloads were my first real exposure to ebooks as a reader as well as a writer. Some of my other backlist books had been out from E-reads (http://www.ereads.com), but I'd never really tried reading ebooks myself until it came time to proof my own productions. And, to my surprise, I found that I loved reading ebooks!

On the writing side, The Chaos Chronicles were my own answer to a series of long, complex novels that took forever to write. I tend to think big in my storylines (far-future science fiction novels), and I'd finished a number of books that took way longer to write than I wanted, from the point of view of keeping a roof over my head. So I conceived a hard SF series that would be a continuing story—my big concept—told through a series of shorter novels, each of which would be a self-contained reading experience. It made sense at the time, and that's how it started out. But one thing led to another, and now each new installment of the Chaos series has turned into a long, complex novel. Yikes! Sunborn took years to write, and I'm now some years into the writing of the fifth book, The Reefs of Time.

Maybe it's karmic payback for my using chaos theory both literally and as a metaphor for the life of my poor protagonist, John Bandicut, who gets a noncorporeal alien—Charlie the quarx—in his head while exploring Triton, moon of Neptune. The next thing he knows, he's caught in a web of impossible missions, first to save Earth from a rogue comet, and then joining the company of aliens to attempt similar missions on a galactic scale. He certainly never expected to encounter sentient stars, back when he was operating a survey rover on Triton; but that's what happens by the time we get to Sunborn and his effort to discover what's causing the premature deaths of stars in the Orion Nebula.

Did you query agents and traditional publishers?  How long before you got your offer of representation/your first contract?
I've been working with an agent and traditional publishers for many years. My first novel contract came about as a consequence of repeatedly trying to sell short stories to a particular anthology editor, the late Terry Carr. That exchange led to Seas of Ernathe, my first novel, published by Laser Books, which recently saw the light of day again for the first time in several decades, with its new edition from E-reads (ebook and print-on-demand trade paper).

After the sale of that novel, I was able to get an agent, and my second novel went to Jim Frenkel, then at Dell Books. He's still my editor, through several publishers, now at Tor. We first met at an SF convention in Boston, where I was trying to slip into a "closed" publisher party, as an unknown new author. He greeted me at the door, read my name tag, and said, "I'm the SF editor at Dell. I have your manuscript, and I'm planning to call your agent on Monday to make an offer." Not a bad way to get started with a new editor. And yes, he let me into the party.

What factors influenced your decision to go with a particular agent or publisher?
Things were simpler in those days, or at least they seemed so. Someone recommended an agent, and soon he was my agent. The publishing wasn't a matter of choosing, exactly; it was a matter of who wanted to buy my stuff!

Are you currently under a traditional publishing contract for future books or do you have manuscripts that you will publish directly for Kindle?
I still have two more books in the Chaos series under contract to Tor. I also have a completely unrelated project, not SF, not a novel, that I may do the indie route. And, by the way, Kindle is just one platform for indie authors. I actually sell more books at the Nook store, and I also have my books at Smashwords, which in turn distributes to Sony, Apple, Kobo, Diesel, etc. I have other backlist books published through E-reads, and those are available at Fictionwise and Baen Webscription (both of which have DRM-free editions), in addition to the stores I just mentioned.

What lessons have you learned being an indie author vs. being traditionally published?
Good question. There are certainly many reasons still to publish through traditional publishers. Working with a good editor is one of them, plus of course the design, marketing, and distribution through traditional paper book outlets. Ebooks are growing by leaps and bounds, but they're still a minority position in book sales. The big publishers continue to play a valuable role as gatekeepers, an editorial filter, if you will, to maintain a certain level of quality in books. That doesn't mean that indies can't be just as good, but indie publishing is definitely the Wild West, in terms of what you might find, as a paying customer.

On the other hand, the profit margin of indie publishing is huge, compared to the per-book earnings for an author through the old system. So much more is in the author's control—from the actual formatting and quality control of the book itself (particularly ebooks, which the big publishers have not yet learned to do all that well), to the price, to monitoring of sales in real time. Plus, of course—and this is big—you get your money a lot faster than you do from a regular publisher.

I've also developed the philosophy, contrary to the position of most mainstream publishers, that DRM on ebooks is bad, and that you'll do a lot better by treating your customers as honest partners in a business exchange, and encourage them to go ahead and put their copies of your books on whatever device they want. More power to them.

To new writers, I still say there are good reasons for trying to break into publishing the old-fashioned way. But for established writers, writers with backlists, the converse is clear: unless you're a big enough name that your New York publisher will keep you in print indefinitely, with continuing promotion (and how often does that happen?) you can do a lot better putting your backlist out yourself.  To this end, a growing number of published authors are seizing control of their backlists and going indie with them. Many of us, in a variety of genres, have joined together as Backlist Ebooks (http://www.backlistebooks.com) to help each other with promotion and general support. Others have joined groups such as Bookview Café (http://www.bookviewcafe.com) with a similar aim. Just in the last few months, I have seen my monthly ebook earnings grow from beer money to mortgage-payment money. And I'm nowhere near the level of some of my backlist colleagues.

Did you design your cover art? 
When I put up my Starstream Publications editions of the first three Chaos books, I created my own covers—and for that matter, the ebook files themselves, which I still do. (I use the open-source software Calibre to produce the ebook files for Kindle and Nook.) Once I saw them in store catalogues as thumbnails, I realized they weren't quite up to the standard I wanted.  I hired a cover designer, Pat Ryan, who is both an experienced designer and an author, to create a new cover for Eternity's End; and then again for my first omnibus edition: The Chaos Chronicles: Books 1-3. She's working now on my next ebook project, Dragon Space, an omnibus of my two science fiction dragon novels, Dragons in the Stars and Dragon Rigger, set in my Star Rigger Universe—the same future history as Eternity's End. Eventually, I hope to get new covers on those individual three Chaos books; but one thing at a time, you know?

If you used a graphic designer/publisher’s designer, how involved were you during the creative process for your cover?
I was completely involved. The designer and I worked very well together. We bounced ideas off each other, and went back and forth on wording of the text, and subtle adjustments to the art. It was a lot of fun, actually. And I was delighted with the results.

What kinds of social media [twitter, facebook, webpage, blog, writing forums] are you involved with trying to garner publicity for your book(s)?
Ah, that stuff. First, let me say this—I'm not a natural social networker, at least not internet-style. I hold my own: I've maintained my own website since 1996 (and yes, it's overdue for a graphic redesign), I post to my blog maybe once a week and those posts go to my Facebook page. I'm not really a Facebook aficionado, and my participation in that great social experiment mostly comes down to responding when folks comment on my blog posts. Twitter...ah, my daughter threatened to disown me if I started tweeting. I created a Twitter account, took one look at the page that landed me on, and never went back. On the other hand, there are forums I enjoy, such as MobileRead (http://www.mobileread.com). And I do the occasional spot appearance, such as this one.

I also teach. Together with my friend, fantasy writer Craig Shaw Gardner, I run the Ultimate Science Fiction Writing Workshop in the Boston area. While that was going on, I was asked to pinch-hit for SF great Joe Haldeman when he became ill, and I taught science fiction writing at MIT for a semester. I've instructed at a variety of workshops, including Odyssey Workshop and the New England Young Writers Conference. I find teaching to be demanding, invigorating, and rewarding—and I've made some wonderful friends in the community of new writers.

What is the best advice you can offer new authors?
Read a ton—and write, write, write.  Rewrite, and demand a lot of yourself and your work. Find and join a good writer's group. I've been part of one for over thirty years, and it's made a tremendous difference in my writing, and in my approach to writing. Seek out good criticism and listen to it—but don't be a slave to it, either. Be persistent. Write what you have a fire in your belly to write, not what you think will sell this year.

I have a page of advice to new writers, actually:

And an entire free online course for aspiring writers, especially young writers:

What’s next for you?
I'm hard at work on The Reefs of Time, the fifth in the Chaos series. And I hope to have Dragon Space up for sale soon.

If you'd like a quick look at some of my work, take a look at:
http://www.starrigger.net/Downloads.htm, where you'll not only see my indie books for sale, but you can download my Battlestar Galactica miniseries novelization for free! There's also some free short fiction for you to read.

Hey, thanks for the questions, and for listening to my long-winded answers!

—Jeffrey A. Carver

Blog: Pushing a Snake Up a Hill at http://starrigger.blogspot.com

Tuesday, April 12, 2011

Funnies: What Artists Do with Wire


 I got this email last week and thought it was pretty amazing.  Here's the best of "What Artists do with Wire and Household Items."



So well-behaved!
Oh no, not a chocolate bath!
Dirty rotten spoon!
I'm outta here!
 You Say Tomato, I Say Tomato. You Say Potatoes, I say Zombies





Monday, April 11, 2011

Interview with S.M. Jonas


Briefly describe your journey in writing your first or latest book.
I wrote Crimson Leaf because I always liked the notion of creating a murder mystery with plenty of genuine clues, but which would still to keep the reader guessing throughout. The fantasy element allowed me to introduce a couple of unusual features that gave a new twist to the mystery genre. While I had hoped that the fantasy setting would save on research, a great deal of it still proved essential to keep subjects such as falconry, poisons, healing, etc. plausible and authentic. I have since come to love the process of research.

Did you query agents and traditional publishers?  How long before you got your offer of representation/your first contract?
Crimson Leaf, being multi-genre (fantasy, murder mystery, romance, coming-of-age) would be very difficult to place with conventional publishers or bookstores. It took a few years, and many submissions, to accept that fact and decide to give indie publishing a go.

Since then, I've changed genre and developed a very different 'voice', and have recently been offered representation for my commercial thrillers.

Are you currently under a traditional publishing contract for future books or do you have manuscripts that you will publish directly for Kindle?
I have an agent for my thrillers, which are very different novels from the fantasies on which I cut my teeth. There is a second fantasy that followed Crimson Leaf, but it requires a lot more work before I would consider publishing it on Kindle.

Did you design your cover art?
Yes. I used to paint in oils, and in recent years I've designed many pieces of digital artwork for various purposes. I enjoyed designing the cover art and putting together the trailer (see crimson-leaf.co.uk).

What kinds of social media [twitter, facebook, webpage, blog, writing forums] are you involved with trying to garner publicity for your book(s)?
As I am using a pseudonym, I'm unable to exploit my established Facebook account so I've concentrated on the Crimson Leaf website - crimson-leaf.co.uk - and on forums such as Kindleboards and Mobileread as well as blogs such as twoendsofthepen.

Besides Amazon, are there other sites where your books are for sale?
Yes, Smashwords, which distributes to a wide range of formats and outlets including Barnes & Noble.

What is the best advice you can offer new authors?
Make sure that your work is as polished as possible, and that it isn't a lack of some important quality that is blocking your access to conventional publishing. Join writers groups, local or online, to find people willing to read and criticize your work in return for you doing the same. You will learn a great deal from both sides of the process.

What’s next for you?
To market Crimson Leaf as an indie while making the changes suggested by my agent to my latest (and hopefully to be traditionally published) novel.

Sunday, April 10, 2011

SFF Shout Out - Some Excellent Titles

Science fiction is my favorite genre to read and to write.  Both QUEST FOR NOBILITY and THE CRYSTAL FACADE are SFF titles with a bit of Arthurian lore thrown in.  In my searches through amazon, I've come across other authors who also write in the SFF genre.  Instead of doing the usual SampleSunday post, I'd thought it would be fun to highlight some fellow authors.  Enjoy and if the books look good, don't forget to 1-click on the book icons! They will take you straight to the Amazon buying page.  Be sure to TURN OFF your ad blockers or else you won't see the icons!



Space Junque (also known as Hero Material) is a novella, about 28,000 words or 112 pages.

Edited by USA Today bestselling author Anne Frasier/Theresa Weir

SPACE JUNQUE was nominated for Best Romantic Science Fiction/Fantasy in 2010 and Best Debut Book in 2010 by The Romance Reviews.

The DOGs want to destroy the world. The gods want to make a new one. The trick is to survive both.



The world is on the brink of ecological cataclysm set off by the Oil Spill of 2010 and the Great Sea Level Rise of 2070. Hydroponics agronomist Char Meadowlark has become a recluse since her fiance was killed by a terrorist bomb and her twin sister Sky went underground to protect a top secret alternative energy project. Warned about an impending eco-terrorist attack, Char tries to get off planet, but the Defenders of Gaia strike while she's at the airport. Shuttle pilot Jake Ardri might offer her only hope.


When the DOGs' onslaught goes global and the material world threatens to implode, the ancient gods reemerge to take control over humanity. Through the ensuing chaos, Char must juggle two men, a world on fire, and a goddess with an agenda for a new world order. 

SPIDERWORK
A fantasy romance. The sequel to Space Junque.
Her fate was to hold the world together. His destiny was to tear it apart.

As a child, Durga was chosen by the goddess to save humanity from sterility and extinction. When her eighteenth birthday approaches she must take her place among the chalices, women blessed by the goddess to provide more souls for the universe. Khai, the scion of Luxor, is unlike any man Durga has ever met. He falls hard for her and isn't afraid to show it -- but accepting his love could destroy everything she's been commanded by the goddess to build.

Char Meadowlark, once touched by the goddess Asherah, has now been discarded. Her lover Jake Ardri now heads an emerging city-state and desperately wants Char to be his queen. When Jake's enemies expose his one weakness, his very existence is threatened. To save Jake, Char must share him with a beautiful chalice -- whose purpose is to take Jake to the heights of sexual ecstasy.

BLEEDER
The King of Garrick wants to kill her.
The King of Allel wants to love her.
And shapeshifters stole her baby's soul!


It's been a hundred years since sea-level rise and global nuclear war wiped out most of humanity. Mallory is a chalice, one of the world's rare fertile females who contract with the kings of the Concord Cities to provide natural-born heirs.

It was supposed to be a pampered and uneventful life, but Mal becomes caught between King Garrick's scheme for world domination and the goddess Asherah's desperate plays for another god's attention.

In her struggle to survive, Mal must confront the most terrifying threat of all -- the truth of her past and the inevitability of her destiny. 

THE KINSHIELD LEGACY
A mysterious stone tablet with five magical gems has sat abandoned in a cave for two hundred years. The kingdom is in ruins, with only warrant knights to keep the peace. But then, the gems in the tablet, one by one, disappear.

Warrant knight Gavin Kinshield is a man of many secrets. He's the one deciphering the runes in the tablet. Unless he can find a suitable replacement, he'll be Thendylath's next king. All he really wants is the letter written by his ancestor Ronor Kinshield, the last man to see King Arek alive... a letter he must earn by tracking down a common thief.

But when Gavin saves a woman's life, what should have been a simple task draws him face-to-face with his nightmarish past... and the truth of King Arek's demise.



VENOM OF VIPERS
A supervirus threatens to wipe out the human population.

The only hope for the future is a cure hidden inside Ryder Stone. Created in a lab and brutalized, betrayed and hated by humans, Ryder yearns for freedom. On the outside, a group of human genetic purists want him dead.

When Katie Marsh, a brilliant young geneticist, discovers his secret, she must fight to protect Ryder, gain his trust...and convince him to save humanity before the purists destroy them both.






CONVERGENCE
Rett, a battle-weary soldier from Nyorfias, needs imagination. Pam, an imaginative dreamer from Earth, needs inspiration. Unknown to both women, a fledgling Guardian of Balance needs them both in a desperate stratagem to protect the very existence of the two-planet Nyorfian system, which is not only under attack from physical entities, but from the dark force that inspires them.

Pam's first ten minutes on Nyorfias, however, just about flushes Rett's military career down the nearest toilet. Can Rett learn to cope with being saddled with a dimwitted alien mindforce--and keep herself and her platoon alive at the same time? 





GRAVITY
Sergeant Rett is yet unaware of the motivating forces behind the long war in the Nyorfian system, much less her role as a Player in a game of gods. All she knows is that once she and F-troop arrive on Epnoce with the rest of the 2023rd, a harsh climate and heavier gravity are the least of her concerns. Pam is gone--just when she could use the support the most. Jaq wants a transfer. Ariam is acting evasive. Her longtime best friend Evetez seems to be doing all he could to get her in serious trouble--and succeeding brilliantly. All she needs now is a close encounter with an old nemisis from the past...

From the back cover:

The second level in Pheasyce's test begins......and all hell breaks loose.

On the second level of the match that will decide the entity Pheasyce's worthiness to become a full Guardian of Balance, the agent for Dark, Xonomer, has the opening advantages. Pheasyce can only stand by and watch as the ancient force of malevolence launches a most insidious attack to undermine the confidence and morale of the unsuspecting Key Player and those closest to her.

Rett is yet unaware of the motivating forces behind the long war in the Nyorfian system, much less her role as a Player in a game of gods. All she knows is that once she and F-troop arrive on Epnoce with the rest of the 2023rd, a harsh climate and heavier gravity are the least of her concerns. Pam is gone--just when she could use the support the most. Jaq wants a transfer. Ariam is acting evasive. Her longtime best friend Evetez seems to be doing all he could to get her in serious trouble--and succeeding brilliantly. All she needs now is a close encounter with an old nemisis from the past... 

QUEST FOR NOBILITY
The parents of royal Otharian twins Darius and Dyla have been murdered; their cousin is stealing their throne, and they are falsely accused of murder. Their only choice is to flee to the forbidden and quarantined planet Earth, but it could turn out to be a one-way trip.

To return home, they must find an ancient crystal, that once belonged to Merlin, to power the return portal. When the twins stumble upon the location of the crystal, the local crime boss sends out his assassin to retrieve it. Can Darius and Dyla use their PSI powers to open the portal home and reclaim their throne before the assassin catches up to them?





THE CRYSTAL FACADE
Royal Otharian twins Darius and Dyla Telkur have a big problem: they know too much about a secret sect of their countrymen living on the forbidden planet Earth. On a previous trip to Earth, they traced the sect's lineage back to the time of Merlin, but a run-in with a local crime boss forced them back to Otharia before they could unravel the mystery.

Now Dyla is dreaming again. Her dreams of the London crime boss portend an imminent threat to her family and she has no choice but to secretly return to Earth to find out what they mean. What the twins don't realize is they're walking into a conspiracy involving a centuries old interplanetary smuggling operation. Will they be able to capitalize on their superior PSI powers to get the answers they need before they fall victim to a telekinetic assassin that has followed them across the galaxy?

Friday, April 8, 2011

MY RESEARCH by Elle Newmark

Today's guest post is from Elle Newmark.  She talks about her research for her new book "The Sandalwood Tree."  Welcome Elle!


Researching The Sandalwood Tree
The Sandalwood Tree required more than a year of digging around in a multitude of books, including history texts, personal diaries, and colonial politics. It was fascinating and it gave me a sketchy plot and a cast of two-dimensional characters. But India is one of those places that is so confoundedly complex you simply cannot fill in the blanks with generic background. After all the library research was finished, there was one more thing I had to do—I had to go to India.

I had visited India ten years earlier and I already knew that it is a perpetual motion kaleidoscope, simultaneously squalid and beautiful in ways I didn’t understand. It is a sensory overload of marigolds heaped before stone idols, plush opulence alongside rock-bottom poverty, heavy air, smelling of curry and smoke, food that sear the skin off your tongue, all the colors of the world including some I could not name, and all this pageantry accompanied by the thump of small round drums, winding flutes, and the swell of a billion voices.

You can’t make that stuff up, and you can’t rely on ten-year-old memories. I needed a refresher.

So I took my notebooks and a tape recorder and flew to New Delhi where I hired a car and driver, Ramesh. We roamed Northern India for a month, visiting all the places in the book, while Ramesh graciously answered questions about history and politics and social customs.

The most important discovery I made was the fact that the place I had set my story did not exist in 1947. That explained why I hadn’t been able to find much on the Internet, but it required that I find a new location for the book. I was like Goldilocks finding one place too hot and another too cold, and I was quite frustrated by the time I remembered I was writing fiction and I could simply make up a place. I took a typical village and put it exactly where I wanted it, and a mountain of logistical problems disappeared. My characters live their fictional lives in the fictional village of Masoorla.

Whenever we stopped I asked whether someone might be willing to talk to me about the British Raj. I offered to pay, but there are not many people left from those times and for those who are it is a taboo subject, better forgotten.

I had almost given up on finding someone to interview until we got to Dharamsala, where the local tour office put me in touch with a Colonel who had served in the Indian Army under the Raj. We arranged to meet at a restaurant and I expected to meet a bent old man in a turban and dhoti. I hoped his English wasn’t too bad.

Imagine my surprise when a tall, dapper man in an immaculate suit and handlebar moustache greeted me with a posh British accent. Colonel Chand was charming and smart and thoroughly anglicized, but he was not happy to have Ramesh sitting at the table with us. The colonel was seventy-five-years old and it offended him to sit at a table with a mere driver-wallah. Ramesh was tolerated for my sake—I was paying very well for the interview—but it was clear that the caste system was being seriously violated.

These experiences are the things you can’t get from a book: seeing the caste system at work; feeling your heart open to the little girl holding her white rabbit up for you to pet; waking in the dark to the haunting call to prayer before dawn; watching people bathe in the Ganges only a few yards down from the funeral pyres…

This is India: a daily, multi-colored compilation of reminders that we are simultaneously living and dying and trying to figure out why.


Author bio: Elle Newmark is an award-winning writer whose books are inspired by her travels.  She and her husband, a retired physician, live in the hills north of San Diego.  To learn more about Elle Newmark and her work, visit her website at www.ellenewmark.com.





Thursday, April 7, 2011

LICENSE FOR IMAGINATION by Suzanne Trypak

Holes in History—License for Imagination
By Suzanne Tyrpak

When I write historical fiction I look for the holes in history, because that’s where I can fill in the gaps and allow imagination free reign.

Writing historical fiction is similar to writing fantasy, except, when writing historical fiction, there are limitations. To some extent, we know about other times, places and people of the past. To some extent, history has been documented. But, as well as creating boundaries, these limitations serve as jumping-off points for story and can fuel the imagination.

World building is essential for historical fiction and fantasy—the writer must create a world and sink the reader into it. In historical fiction, unlike fantasy, readers often have preconceived ideas about the world the writer is creating. For example, if I say ancient Rome, images will probably populate your mind. You may have gleaned these images through reading, movies, television, travel—but you have some knowledge of that time, and I don’t have to build the world from scratch. As a writer, it’s my job to draw those images together for the reader and paint a picture which serves as the context of my story.

Vestal Virgins
This involves a lot of research. And the research can be overwhelming. I’m not a historian. I write fiction. I do research so I can highlight details which will serve my characters and my story. Selecting these details is key. Too many details and my story will be boring, too few and it will lack authenticity. Deciding which details to put in and which to leave out is one of the great challenges of writing historical fiction.

Rather than war and politics, I’m interested in the daily lives of ancient people, especially the roles of women—a lot of that has not been documented. In order to create that world, I steep myself in fragments of writings, jewelry, household goods and my imagination.

If possible, I travel to the country I’m writing about. I work for an airline, partly because the job gives me access to travel. I’ve been to Egypt, Greece and Italy doing research for my stories. I like to smell the air, taste the food, see the light on the buildings, experience the people and explore the setting I plan to write about. I’m also a fan of museums—they help to bring time periods alive for me. For fact checking I sometimes use the internet, especially for photographs, but mostly I consult books. I have shelves of books about the times I write about. I’m particularly fond of the Eyewitness book series designed for children. These books are extremely well researched, and the photographs are wonderful. 

House of Vestal Virgins
For me, the process of writing historical fiction is one of going back and forth: write, research, write, research. Initially, I’m drawn to a time period because of a certain character or event. I learn more about that character or event, and a story begins to form. I read more about the time period. Other characters show up. The story evolves. As I write, I do more research. The characters evolve. The story may go in a new direction. I have to check my facts, to be sure that this is possible. I narrow the time down to a particular year, a particular month, even a particular day. And this goes on throughout the writing of the book. I’m constantly researching as the story unfolds, constantly checking facts and timelines as I weave the threads.

I like using a mixture of historical figures and fictional characters. Usually, my protagonist is fictional—or very little is known about her—because this gives me more leeway as a writer. I research the historical figures, and I’m always delighted to find holes in the information. The holes allow my imagination to work overtime. What if...I ask myself and the story begins to unfold. Other characters come onboard—some from history, some made up, but they always drive the story forward with conflict.

Personally, I’m interested in telling a compelling story—a suspenseful story—that’s set in a time period that I find interesting. I want my stories to be believable, possible, maybe even shed light on history and offer alternatives to accepted history. The holes in history are what I find most fascinating. The holes provide the mystery.

House of Vestal Virgins reopened in Rome in the Winter of 2010
Author bio:
Suzanne Tyrpak ran away from New York a long time ago to live in Colorado. Her debut novel is Vestal Virgin,suspense set in ancient Rome, available as a trade paperback and in all eformats.  Her collection of nine short stories Dating My Vibrator (and other true fiction) is available on Kindle, Nook and Smashwords. J.A. Konrath calls it, “Pure comedic brilliance.”  Her short story Downhill was first published in Arts Perspective Magazine.Rock Bottom is published in the Mota 9: Addiction anthology, available on Kindle.  Her short story Ghost Planewas published by CrimeSpree Magazine. Venus Faded appears in the anthology Pronto! Writings from Rome(Triple Tree Publishing, 2002) along with notable authors including: Dorothy Allison, Elizabeth Engstrom, Terry Brooks and John Saul. Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers awarded her first prize in the Colorado Gold Writing Contest, and Maui Writers awarded her third prize in the Rupert Hughes writing competition.
*New York Times bestselling author, Terry Brooks says about her writing: “...a writer of real talent...a promising new voice.”
*New York Times bestselling author Tess Gerritsen says, “Suzanne Tyrpak weaves a spell that utterly enchants and delights. Her writing is pure magic.”