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Showing posts with label Golden Heart. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Golden Heart. Show all posts

Sunday, July 14, 2013

RWA National Conference!

As you read this I'm probably on a plane about 30000ft above the earth making my way across the Pacific Ocean and the International Dateline.

Why?

It's conference season!!!

And I'm attending the Romance Writers of America® national conference in Atlanta, Georgia.

Thankfully, I'm travelling with a friend, Christine Taylor (one of the 2013 RWA Golden Heart® finalists in the Romantic Suspense section) so it should make the time spent travelling go faster...maybe.

We'll no doubt chat up a storm for some of the 28 hours it takes to get there. We'll certainly be psyching ourselves up for the amazing experience I know RWA is going to be.

This is Chris's first time to RWA, and with all the fun surrounding her with being a GH finalist,  I know she's going to have a ball!

Some of my much anticipated events attending RWA will be:
  • meeting my agent & editor face-to-face for the first time
  • meeting & talking to readers at the Literacy Autographing & Berkley Book-Signing
  • catching up with friends I made when I first came over in 2010 (when I won a Golden Heart® for VENGEANCE BORN)
  • attending the GDRWA® Book Sellers Best awards night (where VENGEANCE BORN is a finalist in the Paranorma/Time Travel/Futuristic & Best First Book sections)
  • attending Margie Lawson's workshop (I had such an a-ha moment when she visited RWAustralia® & RWNew Zealand® a few years ago)
  • sitting beside Chris at the RWA® Awards dinner and cheering her on
Are you going to RWA? If so, then I'll see you there!

There's no doubt I'll come back exhausted...but it will be so worth it!



Wednesday, March 27, 2013

RWA RITA© & Golden Heart © Awards 2013

Can you hear the Aussie, Aussie, Aussie shout out reverberating around the country?

Announcements for the finalists in the Romance Writers of America RITA Awards (published authors) and Golden Heart Awards (for unpublished authors) have been happening overnight and the lists are now complete. For those who don't know, these awards are the Oscars of the romance publishing world!

The following friends and RWAustralia members have received that magical phone call:

GOLDEN HEART Finalists

"The Predator" - Christine Taylor (Romantic Suspense category)

  







RITA Finalists

Zoe’s Muster - Barbara Hannay (Contemporary Single Title)

Bride by Mistake - Anne Gracie (Historical)

Dead Heat - Bronwyn Parry (Romantic Suspense)

A Marriage Worth Fighting For - Lilian Darcy (Short Contemporary Series)



Fantastic news, ladies!!!


You can read a full accounting of the results for the RITA's and Golden Heart here.

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

TOPIC: Why enter writing contests?

Again and because contest season is just around the corner, another re-post, this time one about why enter writing contests - previously entitled, "Do you have the contest bug?"


This is a timeless topic often discussed among writers - the value of entering contests.

RWA Valerie Parv Award
Some are for entering them and are vocal advocates of the benefits of doing so, others advise against entering as many seem to "encourage writers to write to the contest" or they see the writer receiving little value out of them.

I fall into the former category of advocates. The name "contest diva", "contest queen", or the more affectionately yet derogatory "contest sl**" was often mentioned in the same sentence as my name (*grin*). In the course of my unpublished career as a writer, I entered almost 100 contests over the nine years since tackling my first.

When considering whether or not you should enter a contest ask yourself this - why are you entering?

RWNZ Clendon Award
Is to get feedback on your work? Is the contest aimed at judging 3 chapters, a short story or a full manuscript? Is it to final? Is it because your want to get in front of a particular agent or editor? Is it to get a contest resume under your belt?

Let's consider each question.
  • Feedback - entering can be a cheap way to get feedback on your work, particularly if you find a full manuscript contest that gives comments (eg. RWA Emerald Award or the RWNZ Clendon Award).
WHRWA Emily Award
If you belong to a writing organisation, ask yourself this - can I get feedback any other way besides through contests?

Some writing organisations have mentoring schemes, critique groups or critique partner schemes running, so this might be another avenue for you to pursue in your quest to get feedback.
  • Contest criteria - entering a specific type of contest can help your craft. I avoided entering any sort of synopses contest, purely because I hated writing them. But because it was a weakness I'd identified in my craft skills, I forced myself to enter several of these to get feedback before I sent my work out on submission.
  • To final - this is a feather in any writer's cap. I used this as a benchmark to see whether I was improving in my craft but then, in the context of where I was as a writer (geography and isolation, not the level of skill) and the services I had access to this (era of time) proved to be the only option available to me to measure this. (So context is important.)
  • RWA Emerald Award
  • Getting your work in front of an editor/agent - if you have the budget, you can enter as many contests as you like, and some have done this. Most writers don't have unlimited funds, so choosing which particular contest - based on reputation or final judges or specific feedback - and this may determine your decision on whether you enter or not.
Toward the end of my unpublished contest career my goal for entering was driven by who the final judge was. I wanted to get my work in front of an editor or agent who acquired my genre.
    RWA Golden Heart
  • Contest resumes - racking up finalist kudos, placings or wins is certainly a way to impress potential editors and agents but it doesn't always help. Some take no notice of your achievements. I admit, one of my main goals for entering contests, in the latter part of my unpublished career, was to build a resume for each manuscript but it wasn't the only avenue I relied upon to get my work in front of editors/agents.
I think the secret of entering any contest is to identify why you're entering it, what you're hoping to get out of it as a result and to understand that it's one of many strategies, not the only one, to help you in your journey to publication.

So, with the RWAustralia and RWNZ contest season about to start fresh, I know there will be some of you keen to try the contest circuit (and good on you, go for it!). There are a wide range of ones for you to enter here and overseas.

Keeping that in mind, here are a few links you might like to explore to find the sort of contests you'd like to enter:

Romance Writers of Australia contest page
Romance Writers of New Zealand contest page
Romance Writers of America contest page
Stephanie Smith's contest page for author

RWNZ Clendon Readers' Choice Award
But, just remember, I've seen many friends who've taken the contest circuit route in the attempt to get published and I know of others who haven't entered any contests yet been picked up through submitting their work.

There are valid reasons to try both paths, one isn't better than the other.

It's whatever works for you.

Sunday, July 29, 2012

2012 RWA RITA & Golden Heart winners!

Congratulations to the romance world's Best of the Best for 2012.

A special shout out to fellow Aussie, Fiona Lowe, who took out a RITA for her contemporary single title BOOMERANG BRIDE (which was featured here a little while ago).

And a big woohoo for fellow paranormal author, Darynda Jones, for winning a RITA for FIRST GRAVE ON THE RIGHT as Best First Book.

AND a special woot for 2012 Golden Heart winners:

Elizabeth Bemis - Romantic Suspense novel Edge of Deception
Elisa Beatty - Historical Romance novel The Devil May Care

Both are fellow 2010 Unsinkable GH finalists - so good to see them succeed this year!!!

Full results of the night can be viewed here.

Tuesday, February 21, 2012

TOPIC: An Author's Life...with Karina Bliss

Being a published author is an ... involved ... process, and I take my hat off to those who've been in the business more than a few years now.

As a pre-pubbed author I was always curious about what happened once you received THE CALL and stepped into the world of publishing.

What did it involve? How did they handled the day to day pressures? Did they developed routines, set goals etc.? What did they like/dislike about the process?

So I asked my special guests these questions and many of them have offered some intriguing insights into their lives. Maybe they'll even give you a heads up on what to expect if you're thinking of entering the world of "getting published".

Please welcome my next guest...

On average, romance authors take 5 years and  4.5 manuscripts before they get their first book contract. Despite her willingness to be the exception, journalist KARINA BLISS ended up fitting that statistic almost exactly. En route, she became the first Australasian to win a Golden Heart® from the Romance Writers of America.

Her debut, MR IMPERFECT, was published by Harlequin Superromance in Sept '06 and won a Romantic Book of the Year Award in Australia. Since then she’s written ten books for Harlequin SuperRomance.

Author Facts
Pseudonym or Given Name on the cover? Why a pseudonym?

With a name like Karina Bliss who needs a pseudonym, no one believes it's real anyway.
Location: New Zealand.
Published Genre: Harlequin SuperRomance.
Website: www.karinabliss.com (Karina also has a GoodReads blog)
First published in: 2006.
Number of books published: 10

The Nitty Gritty
List up to 5 significant events in your journey to publication?

  1. Peter and Barbara Clendon - The Clendon Award aka Finish The Damn Book for unpublished writers. As Kylie knows, a great success rate with picking writers who go on to publication. 
  2. The Kara School of Writing, a romance workshop run by Daphne Clair and Robyn Donald in Northland, NZ.
  3. The Writegals, my critique group, made up of Abby Gaines, Tessa Radley and the late Sandra Hyatt.
  4. My partner, Trevor, who is still patiently waiting to be a kept man. And in the meantime keeps me.
  5. Winning the Golden Heart®. The manuscript never got published but it didn't matter. Enough to be queen for a night.
What resources/techniques/events did you find useful to develop your writing skills/craft?
I'm a recovering craft book junkie.

The books I keep going back to are: STORY by Robert McKee, WRITING THE BREAKOUT NOVEL by Donald Maass; TECHNIQUES OF THE SELLING WRITER by Dwight Swain, and SAVE THE CAT by Blake Snyder. 


Can you share the special moment when you received THE CALL/THE EMAIL?
All I can remember six years on is wishing Victoria Curran would quit with the small talk and get straight to the "We want to buy your book" part!

Funnily enough when she did say those magic words, it still took a couple of days before I really truly beleived it and started celebrating. 

Looking back over your writing career, how have you grown as an author?
I think I get better with every book - and worse - which isn't the contradiction it sounds. Craft improves hugely under the guidance of an editor, but it's also a case of the more you know the harder it is to let go through the first draft. Voice is there from the beginning but I also think it evolves and deepens with every book.

How important is it to set career goals? Can you give an example of one you have for yourself?
I have mixed feelings about setting career goals. One, I think they're important, two I think you should always be open to revising them.

The only personal goal that has never changed is to write keepers. Whether I acheive that or not is decided by the reader, the particular story resonating with me as I write it, and lots and lots of fairy dust. But I'd rather fail big than win small.

Can you describe your writing process/timeframe from when you start a new book to handing it in at deadline?
Let's take the last book I turned in as it's fresh - BRING HIM HOME, out June 2012.

I have an initial idea - A guy falls in love with his army buddy's widow. And I push that idea to the nth degree. What if he had to make a Sophy's Choice (lesser of two evils)  in the ambush that killed his buddy? What if his buddy was complicit in that choice? What if he's so scarred emotionally he turns his back on his friends, the only family he has?

What if his best friend's widow forces him to come home because his signature in a family trust is required in order for her sell the home and invest in a business? What if she hasn't forgiven her late husband for something and the hero has to act as go between?

What if his own redemption is increasingly tied to reconciling the widow to her late husband at the same time he falls in love with her?

I also look at genre conventions and try and twist them. Let's have a widow who adored her husband. Let's have the late husband a major character in the book. Let's have the love triangle about the hero's loyalty to his best friend as much as his love for his best friend's widow. Let's have a woman who's moving on and a hero who can't. Let's explore the idea of a soulmate against the backdrop of a happy marriage to someone else.

How will I make a reader believes that this man and no other is the 'one' while still developing an affection for the heroine's late husband?

That's a story evolution that takes a few months to write myself into. And all the time I'm studying facts looking to ground the story in reality which is necessary for SuperRomance. For this book, the SAS, sportsfishing, family trusts and working as a bodyguard were all areas that needed researching. Not to mention how people process grief.

The first draft is torturous. A crawl of four to six pages a day. If I write ten I can guarantee I'll delete five. I'm not a born writer but I'm an excellent reviser :) and I'm totally committed to doing my best work.

One of the things I found challenging about being a published author is the constant juggling of tasks ie. writing a book, editing another, planning promotion, writing the prosposal for another (and usually this all happens while holding down another job or dealing with family/life etc.).

What do you enjoy the most in the publishing process?
I love the beginning - coming up with ideas and the end - line edits and AA's when all the hard work is done and you're tweaking.

What do you least in the publishing process?
Everything after page three until three pages to the end.

What's the most memorable fan-mail you've received?
Every reader email is special. I still find it wondrous that strangers  read my books.

Is there anything you think pre-publishers writers need to know about the business/industry before they're published?
The quality of the book is the only thing you really have control over. Know what you want out of being published - fame, fortune, critical acclaim and keep that as your touchstone when you're making decisions that affect your career.

A Bit of Fun
Favorite color:
Money.
Hunkiest hero ever: Brad Pitt in Legends of the Fall. (And then he cut his hair and I went off him...so shallow).
Most daring thing you've done in your life: I was a broke Kiwi travelling through the States and ran out of money. I slept on a friend's floor for a month, working in a card shop, until I could fly home. That friend lived in a frat house at Stanford University where he was studying! I was little sister to thirty guys. An amazing experience, Animal House meets The Sound of Music.
Greatest love: My husband and son.
Timeout/relaxation for me includes: Reading on an exercycle. I'm magically getting fitter while I'm lost in a book.
Special quote/saying you like: "I can't stand Willy Wet Leg, can't stand him at any price. He's resigned and when you hit him, he lets  you hit him twice." - D. H. Lawrence. It just makes me laugh.

Saturday, September 17, 2011

TOPIC: Do You Have the Contest Bug?

This is a timeless topic often discussed among writers - the value of entering contests.

RWA Valerie Parv Award
Some are for entering them and are vocal advocates of the benefits of doing so, others advise against entering as many seem to "encourage writers to write to the contest" or they see the writer receiving little value out of them.

I fall into the former category of advocates. The name "contest diva", "contest queen", or the more affectionately yet derogatory "contest sl**" was often mentioned in the same sentence as my name (*grin*). In the course of my unpublished career as a writer, I entered almost 100 contests over the nine years since tackling my first.

When considering whether or not you should enter a contest ask yourself this - why are you entering?

RWNZ Clendon Award
Is to get feedback on your work? Is the contest aimed at judging 3 chapters, a short story or a full manuscript? Is it to final? Is it because your want to get in front of a particular agent or editor? Is it to get a contest resume under your belt?

Let's consider each question.
    • Feedback - entering can be a cheap way to get feedback on your work, particularly if you find a full manuscript contest that gives comments (eg. RWA Emerald Award or the RWNZ Clendon Award).
    WHRWA Emily Award
    If you belong to a writing organisation, ask yourself this - can I get feedback any other way besides through contests?

    Some writing organisations have mentoring schemes, critique groups or critique partner schemes running, so this might be another avenue for you to pursue in your quest to get feedback.
    • Contest criteria - entering a specific type of contest can help your craft. I avoided entering any sort of synopses contest, purely because I hated writing them. But because it was a weakness I'd identified in my craft skills, I forced myself to enter several of these to get feedback before I sent my work out on submission.
    • To final - this is a feather in any writer's cap. I used this as a benchmark to see whether I was improving in my craft but then, in the context of where I was as a writer (geography and isolation, not the level of skill) and the services I had access to this (era of time) proved to be the only option available to me to measure this. (So context is important.)
    • RWA Emerald Award
    • Getting your work in front of an editor/agent - if you have the budget, you can enter as many contests as you like, and some have done this. Most writers don't have unlimited funds, so choosing which particular contest - based on reputation or final judges or specific feedback - and this may determine your decision on whether you enter or not.
    Toward the end of my unpublished contest career my goal for entering was driven by who the final judge was. I wanted to get my work in front of an editor or agent who acquired my genre.
      RWA Golden Heart
    • Contest resumes - racking up finalist kudos, placings or wins is certainly a way to impress potential editors and agents but it doesn't always help. Some take no notice of your achievements. I admit, one of my main goals for entering contests, in the latter part of my unpublished career, was to build a resume for each manuscript but it wasn't the only avenue I relied upon to get my work in front of editors/agents.
    I think the secret of entering any contest is to identify why you're entering it, what you're hoping to get out of it as a result and to understand that it's one of many strategies, not the only one, to help you in your journey to publication.

    So, with the RWAustralia and RWNZ contest season about to start fresh, I know there will be some of you keen to try the contest circuit (and good on you, go for it!). There are a wide range of ones for you to enter here and overseas.

    Keeping that in mind, here are a few links you might like to explore to find the sort of contests you'd like to enter:

    Romance Writers of Australia contest page
    Romance Writers of New Zealand contest page
    Romance Writers of America contest page
    Stephanie Smith's contest page for author

    RWNZ Clendon Readers' Choice Award
    But, just remember, I've seen many friends who've taken the contest circuit route in the attempt to get published and I know of others who haven't entered any contests yet been picked up through submitting their work.

    There are valid reasons to try both paths, one isn't better than the other.

    It's whatever works for you.

    Saturday, July 16, 2011

    CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS 3: Roll out the red carpet...for Awards Night

    Whether you attend the Academy Awards of romance writing (aka the RWAmerica Awards night), the Aussie or New Zealand awards dinners, you'll be in for a wonderful few hours of showcasing the best our organisations have to offer.

    RWA Emerald:ST winner - Alli Withers
    The RWAustralia Awards dinner can be celebrated by anywhere between 100-150 people and you sign up to a table prior to the night. Sometime during the Saturday you'll be reminded by our MC that if you're going to the dinner to put your name on a table-sign in sheet.

    If you don't know anyone, just pick a table and put your name on it. You'll get to know them before the night is over.

    RWA R*BY Award - Sharon Archer
    This is the night we showcase our unpublished finalists in the swag of contests run throughout the year (culminating in the RWA Valerie Parv Award, and Emerald Awards for category and single title) as well as our published authors (with the R*BY Awards), media award and Lynne Wilding Meritorious Service Award.

    The awards are announced and handed out between each course of the meal. And (my favourite part) is towards the end when people are asked to stand up and acknowledge our personal achievements (started by Anne Gracie), whether it be finishing their first book, to entering a contest, to submitting a manuscript or getting that elusive contract!

    RWNZ Clendon winner - Chris Weston
    This format is similar to the RWNZ Awards dinner. There's usually a 'theme' to come dressed to though - last year it was a fantasy theme. The highlight of the night is the RWNZ Clendon Award for unpublished writers & the Clendon Readers' Choice Award.

    The number attending tends to be a little smaller (anywhere between 70-100) but this makes for a very intimate and special setting and you get up close and personal with our special guests and finalists.
    Clendon Readers' Choice - Michelle de Rooy

    At RWAmerica, prepared to be blown away by the sheer size of the night - glamor and glitz, red carpet style presentations, jumbo-tron TV screens so the 2000 strong audience of fellow writers, published authors, agents, editors and other officials can see everything that goes on up on stage, the RITA's, the Golden Heart presentations, etc.etc.

    If you're lucky enough to be a RITA or Golden Heart finalist you get to sit at a table right at the front accompanied by one special guest, usually at a table mixed with other finalists and industry professionals.
    RWAmerica Awards night
    Whichever awards dinner you go to, be prepared to dress up and celebrate the romance genre and those who have done well in contests, publishing, promoting romance and volunteering to make our organisations the best they can be.

    Roll out the red carpet...and celebrate romance!

    Thursday, May 5, 2011

    Who's That Girl? interview with Shea Berkley

    We're headed inland USA today to meet another fellow 2010 Golden Heart® finalist. 

    Name? Shea Berkley
    My kids call me "Hey, lady."
    My husband calls me "Woman, where's my supper?"
    I think I've been kidnapped, but the authorities assure me this really is my family.

    Where are you? At this moment in time I'm in my loft typing away at revisions that for some odd reason my editor is insistent I do.  I don't get it.  She bought the book.  Why would she want me to change the perfection that it is?

    Okay, tongue out of cheek. (maybe not all the way, but mostly)  I live in the Northern Hemisphere in a little place called the United States of America in an obscure state, New Mexico which most Americans don't even know is part of the United States.

    I kid you not.  I live with said aforementioned husband (aka my sugar daddy). Against our country's wishes we've produced five children whose sole mission in their collective lives is to make me insane.  They just haven't realized I was crazy enough to marry their father ... so HA! on them.

    Stunning New Mexico landscape
    Oh, New Mexico! I traveled through there...(mumble, mumble)...years ago when I was twenty after taking part of an exchange program with Lock Haven University in Pennsylvania.
    I loved the stunning landscape, particularly around Albuquerque (and of course, a hop, skip and a jump away in Arizona is the Grand Canyon)!
    The Grand Canyon, AZ
    How many years have you been a member of RWA® America? I'm not sure.  A while. More than ten years.  I think they want me to forget I belong, but I keep sending them my dues and they grudgingly take them.

    What genres do you write? I started out writing nonfiction and then got the bug to write fiction. My first foray was in historical romantic fiction.  I lived in England at the time and was just soaking in the history so it seemed like a no brainer.  Over 200,000 words later and a sweetly worded rejection from Avon, "You've got to be kidding me this is seriously way, way, way too long."

    I switched to contemporary romantic fiction and finaled for the first time in the Golden Heart® contest.  It was fun, but I realized I was not romantically inclined enough to write straight romance, so I then turned to writing Fiction with Romantic Elements and finaled in my second Golden Heart® contest. Fun again. Then I decided, because I read so many Young Adult stories (yeah, I've got a Peter Pan complex) I'd try my hand at writing YA and I finaled for the third time in the Golden Heart® contest.  Super fun.

    Between all that, I wrote a story called TORREIN: AGE OF FEAR, a epic coming of age fantasy.  For a long time the market for epic fantasy was dead.  Then my agent found an amazing publisher that loved my story and bought it.  TORREIN: AGE OF FEAR will be released November 2011 with Variance Publishing.  Super fabulous fun!!!

    Who are my favorite authors? Oh, I'm a fickle girl.  I usually fall into a mad crush with the one I'm reading. Suzanne Collins is spectacular.

    Then there's Sharon Sala. Bernard Cornwell. Dean Koontz. Darynda Jones. Melissa Marr. Lisa Gardner. Jordan Dane. Susan E. Phillips. Lesley Kagen. Sarah Addison Allen. Holly Black.

    See?  I could go on and on and on...

    Hmm, I don't think you're fickle at all, Shea! It looks like most writers recognise and love a good story, doesn't matter who wrote the book. So it's logical our tastes and favorites will change over time!

    What inspired you to write romance? I read, a lot.  I've always loved romance.  People love to be in love or find love or remember love or defend love.  But we're playing by the truth game today, well sort of. Not everything I'm telling you is strictly 100 proof truth, but a lot of it is. You figure out what's real and what isn't. (big, fat grin)

    But what I'm about to tell you is true.  I'm not much of a romantic.  I love romance, but I can't seem to be romantic.  I'm more interested in playing and making out than being romantic, so when I sit down, I have to force myself to think in a way that is in direct opposition to how I view life.  But I get points for trying, and sometimes I actually pull a miracle from my sweet ... ahem ... gluteous area and please my agent with a romantic scene.

    Who's your agent? I have a dream of an agent, Laurie McLean for the wonderful Larson and Pomada Literary Agency.  She's got my back. Love her dearly.

    Ohh, Laurie was one of the agents I had on my top ten list! Good on you for snaffling her, she sounds like a gem!

    What's the best thing about going to conference? Hands down, meeting other writers. It's a geekfest of talking story, structure, character and motivation.  I get all blushy and my heart speeds up when I think about it.  Sadly, I won't be attending the 2011 RWA conference in New York, but I wish I were.  (sniffle, sigh)

    And lastly, finish these statements...
    My greatest strength as a writer is...umm, I don't know.  I've never thought about it.  Seriously, I don't want to think about it.  If I know, I might freak myself out because I'll know I can always do better and then I might freeze up and then, well, I'd be an unhappy, woman sitting in the corner sucking my thumb and rubbing my blankie against my cheek.
    A sexy hero needs...to act confident, look good and make me laugh, then make me cry, then make me want to know more after I read The End.
    My latest WIP is about...I can't tell you, but I can say it's a Young Adult novel that my agent is soo excited about she's getting a little demanding, which is a good thing even though it makes me crazy at times.
    When I write I like to...have copious amounts of coke. The soft drink not the narcotic.  I also eat chocolate. Every day.  That's right.  I'm an unhealthy writer.  What of it?  Seriously, if I didn't do kickboxing everyday, I'd be enormous.  Other than those two things, I like to snuggle my feet under my dog and pray she doesn't pass gas. Don't judge her. She has tummy issues.
    My best writing milestone to date is...signing a contract was pretty dang awesome, gotta say.  But my biggest writing milestone is convincing my husband that if I got a "real" job, I'd probably only get fired for doing something inappropriate ... like singing to a customer, or shouting out BINGO just cause, or pretending to be pregnant and that I'm going into labor.  (I sorta, kinda, mighta done all those things before). That he agreed made me a tad annoyed that he'd think I was that juvenile, but then I realized he'd said I could stay home and write.  Booya!  I win!

    Shea's latest YA is THE MARKED SON and will be released from Entangled Publishing in August 2011.

    If you'd like to learn more about her, she has a gorgeous website with more information about her and her books.

    Saturday, March 26, 2011

    RWA 2011 RITA® & Golden Heart® finalists

    A huge congratulations to all of the 2011 RWA RITA® and Golden Heart® finalists!

    What a thrilling ride you're all embarking on in the build up to the Nationals in New York in July. Enjoy and make the most of it!
    RWA® Golden Heart necklace
    A special shout out to my RWA® 2010 Unsinkable Sisters who made it through again:
    • Sharon Lynn Fisher (Paranormal Romance)
    • Clarissa Southwick (aka Gail Zerrade - Novel w/Strong Romantic Elements)
    • Lisa Connelly (Contemporary Single Title)
    • Shelley Coriell (Young Adult Romance)
    • Nan Dixon (aka Nancy Evertz - Contemporary Series Romance)
    • Sharon Wray (Romantic Suspense)
    • Laurie Kellogg (Inspirational Romance)
    And a huge woohoo to my fellow Science Fiction Romance Brigade members who made the lists:

    Laurie Green
    Golden Heart® dual finalist (Paranormal Romance)

    Sharon Lynn Fisher
    Golden Heart® finalist (Paranormal Romance)

    RWA RITA® Award

    Marcella Burnard
    RITA® dual finalist (Best First Book & Paranormal Romance sections)
    
    And the good news keeps coming! Congratulations to the DownUnder contingent for their RWA RITA® Award nominations:

    Marion Lennox
    (Contemporary Series Romance)

    Kelly Hunter
    (Contemporary Series Romance)

    Sandra Hyatt
    (Romance Novella)

    For the full list of RWA RITA® & Golden Heart® finalists, click here.

    Friday, March 11, 2011

    GUEST BLOGGING: Over at Jennifer Jakes blog...(busy week!)

    I'm guest blogging over at Jennifer Jakes' blog today (The Ramblings of a Sleep Deprived Romance Writer) - don't you love the tag line? She's a fellow Golden Heart® "Unsinkable" & TWRP published historical author.

    Jennifer posed questions about driving down bumpy roads and smooth highways, what troubles me, and oh yeah, some about writing!

    Come on over and say hi if you have a spare few...

    Thursday, March 10, 2011

    Who's that GUY? Interview - Kenneth Zak

    A break from the ladies of RWA®, RWOz & RWNZ.

    Today, please welcome my fellow Unsinkable "classmate" and the only man to be a 2010 Golden Heart® finalist.

    Name? Kenneth Zak.

    Where are you? San Diego, Californa, USA.

    How many years have you been a member of RWA®? Just celebrated my 1 year anniversary. Where are my gifts? Everywhere.

    What genre do you write? Novels with strong romantic elements (set around islands & water).

    Who are your favourite authors? Garcia Marquez, Paulo Coelho, Carlos Ruiz Zafon, Michael Ondaatje, Milan Kundera, Rumi, Pablo Neruda. 

    Koh Chang, Thailand
    What inspired you to write romance? Life.

    What's the best thing about going to conference? So many wonderful storytellers gathered in one place.

    And lastly, finish these statements...
    My greatest strength as a writer is...wonder.    
    A sexy hero/heroine needs...soul.
    My latest WIP (work in progress) is about...a son discovering secrets of his late father's life, and his own, through his father's lovers.
    When I write I like to...lose (and find) myself.
    My best writing milestone to date is...my debut novel, THE POET'S SECRET, being a 2010 RWA Golden Heart® finalist.
    Steps to Amoud


    Thanks for answering my questions, Ken! Thank you for including me!

    Click on the link if you'd like to visit Ken's website or feel free to "friend him" on Facebook (Kenneth Zak, San Diego).

    Monday, March 7, 2011

    GUEST AUTHOR: Darynda Jones

    My guest author today comes all the way from the USA. She and I first met up on stage at the Romance Writers of America® Awards dinner. As the 2009 Golden Heart® winner (for the paranormal romance section), she presented me with my 2010 Golden Heart.

    Please welcome St.Martin's Press paranormal romance author, Darynda Jones.

    Welcome to my blog! Let's start with an easy question - who is Darynda Jones?
    Winner of the 2009 Golden Heart® for Best Paranormal Romance for her manuscript FIRST GRAVE ON THE RIGHT, Darynda was born spinning tales of dashing damsels and heroes in distress for any unfortunate soul who happened by, annoying man and beast alike.

    After the Golden Heart final, she pimped herself as best she could, landed an amazing agent and sold to St. Martin’s Press in a three-book deal. Darynda lives in the Land of Enchantment, also known as New Mexico, with her husband of more than 25 years and two beautiful sons, aka the Mighty, Mighty Jones Boys. She can be found at www.daryndajones.com

    So, that’s the official story. The real one, the story behind the story, is much more interesting. It involves murder, car chases and random explosions. Just kidding. I’m about as boring as a girl can get, but I sure have fun pretending I’m not. Except for that one time I was thrown out of a restaurant for impersonating a CIA agent. That took some explaining.

    You impersonated a CIA agent?!? I bet you won't be doing that again in a hurry. LOL

    When did you start to write and how long did it take you to be published?
    I started writing when I was five. Yep, a born storyteller. Not, however, a genius. I didn’t actually learn to read and write until I was six. No way was I going to let that stop me. I would scribble on a paper and swear it was a romantic play or a story about a boy and his duck. (Long story.)

    I wrote on and off for decades, taking breaks with kids, school, and career, until I finally got serious and started writing toward publication in 2002. It took me seven years to sell.

    So, what's been happening in your world since the RWA conference in Orlando?
    My first book, FIRST GRAVE ON THE RIGHT, just came out from St. Martin’s Press, so I’ve been super busy with promo and socializing. I’ve been amazed at how intricate and involved the process it.

    I've been following part of that journey via some of your blog interviews. Phew! What an exhausting process!

    It's always interesting finding out what sparks a writer's creativity. Is there anything that helps yours?
    Anything and everything, but mostly music, movies and other books.

    Hmm, a lot of my guests speak of similar interests. Now, onto one of my favorite questions - what do you think it is about your genre that readers find fascinating?
    The impossible coming to life.

    Part of my job as a writer is to make the unreal real. I have to make it so believable, so everyday, that you jump into the story and never doubt it’s possibility for a minute. If you do, then I haven’t done my job. The men are powerful and surreal, the woman strong and clever, and the stories are so much fun and inventive that the reader just loses him- or herself. Pure escapism. Pure entertainment.

    Are you a panster or plotter? Is it your characters or your plot that influence you most? What's your writing process from start to finish when writing a book?
    I plot like there’s no tomorrow, but the characters definitely influence everything about the book. The characters always come first. It’s their story, after all. If they are not at the wheel, then the story loses its soul and I am telling a story for the sake of plot. I am giving directions to the nearest gas station. Not something I want to read, nor would I expect my readers to put up with that.

    Please, tell us about your new release!
    Absolutely! This is from the publisher:

    Charley Davidson is a part-time private investigator and full-time Grim Reaper.  Meaning, she sees dead people. Really. And it's her job to convince them to "go into the light."  But when these very dead people have died under less than ideal circumstances (like murder), sometimes they want Charley to bring the bad guys to justice.  

    Complicating matters are the intensely hot dreams she's been having about an Entity who has been following her all her life...and it turns out he might not be dead after all.  In fact, he might be something else entirely. But what does he want with Charley?  And why can’t she seem to resist him?  And what does she have to lose by giving in?

    With scorching-hot tension and high-octane humor, FIRST GRAVE ON THE RIGHT is your signpost to paranormal suspense of the highest order.  

    Whoo-eee! What a story, I can't wait to read it! So, what's next for you? What are you working on now?
    With books two and three of the Charley Davidson series, SECOND GRAVE ON THE LEFT and THIRD GRAVE DEAD AHEAD, safely with my publisher, I am now working with my editor on a young adult series that also sold to St. Martin’s, the first of which is titled GRIMSIGHT and slotted for an April 2012 release date.

    Congratulations! It must be incredibly satisfying to have another series on the go with three books coming out! I wish you well on its success, Darynda.

    For those looking forward to reading Darynda's debut series (with St.Martin's Press), here are the US release dates:

    FIRST GRAVE ON THE RIGHT-Feb 2011
    SECOND GRAVE ON THE LEFT-Aug 2011
    THIRD GRAVE DEAD AHEAD-Feb 2012


    All right, last question, I promise! For those out there on the long journey to seeing their work in print, do you have any advice/handy tips/craft skills you'd like to share with unpublished authors?
    Just this: Finish the book. And as soon as it’s finished, start the next and finish it too. Practice makes perfect.

    Thank you so much for having me, Kylie. I was so honored to present you with your Golden Heart® in Orlando and can’t wait for your book to hit the shelves! 
    It was a pleasure meeting you too, Darynda. That's a night I won't forget in a hurry. Thanks for visiting my blog, it's been a hoot!

    If you'd like to know more about Darynda or want to read the excerpts from her books (*spoiler alert, proceed at your own risk!), click on this link for her website. You can also follow her on Facebook or Twitter.

    Darynda's other books:

    Second Grave on the Left
    Third Grave Dead Ahead

    Monday, January 10, 2011

    GUEST AUTHOR: Barbara Binns

    Today, my guest author is fellow Unsinkable, 2010 Golden Heart® finalist, Barbara Binns. Welcome to my blog!

    Tell us, who is B.A.Binns?
    B. A. Binns, that's the name I use for my YA novels, although my plans are to distinguish my adult novels (when I finally launch them) by using my given name. Since I'm concentrating on one genre at a time, B. A. works for now.

    From what part of America do you hail?
    I'm a Chicago area girl, born and raised. I went away to college at UW Madison and Michigan State in E. Lansing, then lived and for a brief time in Virginia and Washington D. C. before returning.  Of course, every year this time I wonder why I'm not in Florida or southern California.

    How many years have you been a member of the Romance Writers of America®?
    I joined RWA in 2007. And now I'm a member of several chapters, including Chicago North, WisRWA, YA RWA, The Golden Network and Rose City Romance Writers.  I am also pleased to be part of the Unsinkables, the 2010 Golden Heart® finalists.  (As you can tell, I'm a joiner)

    What genre/s do you write?
    YA Romance and Romantic Suspense.

    Who are your favorite authors?
    The problem with a question like this is I inevitably miss someone I absolutely adore. Lisa Kleypas, Sharon Draper, Tanita Davis, Simone Elkeles, Anne Golon, and the list goes on.

    What inspired you to write romance?
    I liked reading romance, and stories about people falling in love kept going through my head. There was this one about a former prostitute and a killer that wouldn't leave me, and while I know that's not the usual romance couple I couldn't shake them so I ended up writing them. That became my 2010 Golden Heart® finalist novel, and whether it ever finds a place on the bookshelves or not, I know it's one of the best things I've ever written.

    I got into writing YA because I began reading YA, and the stories are compelling, vibrant, risk-taking, and keep pulling me back. Today's YA is so much more than what it was when I was young, and publishers are willing to take risks with subjects that are edgy, different and sometimes pretty much verboten in adult books. I write YA because the edginess appeals to me, and I have the opportunity to hear from young readers about how my words reflect and sometimes impact their lives. I love those emails.

    I guess I write romance and YA for the same reasons I read them, they give hope. And youth is both a stressful time and the time in life when people feel the most passion about things. All that makes for enjoyable writing.

    Can you tell us a little bit about your book, PULL, and its characters?
    PULL is a YA romance between two high school students, David and Yolanda. Each has suffered loss and each has developed the kind of strength the other one needs. It’s also a coming of age story where both of them have to make choices that will forever alter their futures.

    In the beginning David believes his only goal is to fulfill his dead mother’s last wishes because he feels guilty about not saving her life.  But there’s a deeper truth he hides even from himself--the fear that he is just like his father, the man who murdered the woman he supposedly loved. The stresses that descend on David as he struggles to protect his sisters and deal with his guilt only increases a natural feeling of resentment that leaves him fearing he should abandon his sisters to protect them from himself.

    Everything is seen and experienced from David’s point of view and I hope male readers will see something of themselves in him. I hope girls will see the potential in him and in the young men in their lives and see Yolanda as a role model whenever they start feeling they are nothing without a guy.

    One last PS - In English classes I used to hate when teachers talked about THEME. Now I realize I have a deep theme of my own. I write about relationships and people being more than just the sum of their parts.  PULL's t heme is our relationship with our parents, and whether we owe them a debt that includes giving up our own dreams for them.

    You can check out Barbara's trailer for PULL here.
    And here's the blurb:
    Seventeen-year-old David can’t escape from a past that includes his mother’s murder at the hands of his father. When he departs the elite Grogan Hills Academy and enters a new school on Chicago’s south side, he’s prepared to give up sports, friends, and his desire for independence to care for his orphaned sisters.


    His quest for anonymity is shattered when he’s obliged to rescue one sister from an attack by members of the school’s elite pack led by Yolanda, “The Dare,” the acknowledged school slut. David is prepared for the school psychologist’s attempt to force him out of the shell he’s drawn around himself. But he’s not prepared for the way guilt makes him lash out at the people he loves, forcing him to confront the fear that he’ll follow in his father’s destructive footsteps. Nor is he prepared for his growing attraction to Yolanda, a girl hiding a secret shame more destructive than his own. 

    Do you have a dream agent and/or dream publisher?
    My dream agent happens to be MY agent, Andrea Somberg from the Harvey Klinger, Inc. agency. Not just because she loved PULL, and I don't use the word love lightly, but because of the way she worked overtime to find my publisher, WestSide Books, all in a matter of months from the time she first read the manuscript. You can't beat that enthusiasm. And she gives great career advice too.

    Dream publisher, again, right now I have to go with my publisher. How could WestSide not be my dream when they believe enough to put my guy's face on the cover of the hardback book they worked overtime to get published in under a year?  I do not write aiming at a specific publishing house. I wrote my story and then went out looking for people who shared that love and were willing to publish my vision. Not that WestSide Books didn't edit things carefully, and I spent many nights working on their changes, but they loved the overall vision.  I won't think about the so-called dream publisher until after my books are finished because I write the books of my heart. Hopefully I'll be able to stay with people who are of like minds.

    What's the best thing about going to conference?
    All the different people I get to meet. My first conference I tried to attend every possible session and just wore myself out. Now I go for the purpose of meeting people. Anything else is gravy.

    And lastly, finish these statements...
    My greatest strength as a writer is...
    that I know how to pull a story apart and revise and edit it nearly to death before resurrecting a phoenix that's all the better for that near-death experience. I'm really not a great writer, my first drafts make me cringe. But I'm a darn good fixer, so once my page is no longer blank I roll up my sleeves and figure out how to fix those darn scenes, make the pace zing and whip the characters into shape.
    A sexy hero needs...to really care about other people. Not just the woman he's falling for, but other people as well, and be willing to reach outside his comfort zone to help them. That's how the heroine knows he will always be there for her. My hero in PULL even tries to help people he doesn't like.  And, as one of PULL's reader said, "you can tell a guy's a keeper by the way he treats his mother and sisters." That's as important a part of being a hero as a six-pack (which he has) and good looks (which he also has in abundance). I made my David to be a keeper, and frankly, I'm jealous of his girlfriend.
    My latest WIP (work in progress) is about...this really sexy con-man (ex con man, he wants to go straight in spite of the urges he still feels when he sees an easy mark), and a very brash high school psychologist who can't believe she's even attracted to a guy like him when the wealthy scion of a business magnate - and her brother's business partner - wants to marry her. Then her brother's secretary turns up dead and all signs point to our con man. But she can't make herself believe he's guilty, not even when someone begins stalking her.
    When I write I like to...relax in bed and let the thoughts flow. I'm a late-night writer, so a good cup of hot chocolate and good music is what I need to get words pumping.
    My best writing milestone to date is...having one of my novels final in the 2010 Golden Heart® contest.  Really it was gathering up the guts to send my manuscript into the Golden Heart® last year. That was a huge act for me, because I didn't believe anyone but its mother would ever love it.

    For anyone wanting to know more about Barbara, she'd love to hear from you. You can find her contact details on her website, her Facebook page, and you can follow her on Twitter (barbarabinns).

    Barbara, thank you so much for visiting today. It's been a pleasure having you here!

    Saturday, January 8, 2011

    Top Picks for 2010

    Top 10 Books I Read in 2010...(in no particular order)
    RAPTURE - Jacqueline Frank
    PLEASURE UNBOUND - Larissa Ione
    ABANDON THE NIGHT - Joss Ware
    BEYOND THE NIGHT - Joss Ware
    EMBRACE THE NIGHT ETERNAL - Joss Ware
    THE BETTER PART OF DARKNESS - Kelly Gay
    UNDER FIRE - Jo Davis
    SWEET SURRENDER - Maya Banks
    BRANDED SANCTUARY - Joey W.Hill
    BEYOND THE SHADOWS - Jess Granger

    *Interesting to note all but one of these are new authors for me.

    Top 10 Guest Authors on my blog in 2010...(based on stats & in no particular order)
    Helene Young
    Helene Young (Australian romantic suspense)
    Joss Ware (apocalyptic paranormal romance)
    Christina Phillips (ancient historical romance)
    Tracey O'Hara (dark urban fantasy)
    Erica Hayes (urban fantasy) x 2
    Mel Teshco (erotic paranormal romance)
    Cathryn Brunet (erotic contemporary/paranormal romance)
    Maree Anderson (erotic paranormal romance)
    Nalini Singh (paranormal romance)

    Top 10 Personal Milestones in 2010...(in no particular order)
    Publishing with Berkley (& working with my editor Leis Pederson)
    Finding my super/wonderful/amazing agent - Elaine Spencer at The Knight Agency
    RWA Golden Heart®
    Winning an RWA Golden Heart® (paranormal romance section)
    Meeting many of the 2010 GH "Unsinkables" in Orlando, Florida
    Winning the WHRWA Emily contest & "The Best of the Best" (which led to Leis Pederson requesting my work!)
    Placing in 6 of the 8 RWA® contests I entered
    Attending the trifecta of romance writers' conferences in USA, Australia & New Zealand
    Pitching at all three conferences
    Fulfilling my writing goals for 2010
    Growing my blog

    Top 10 Popular Posts of 2010...(based on stats & in no particular order)
    Winter Rose Finalist
    Guest Author: Christina Phillips
    Guest Author: Helene Young
    Guest Author: Nalini Singh
    Guest Author: Tracy O'Hara
    Poison Kissed: Erica Hayes
    Agents, Editors & Book Deals...oh my!
    Guest Author: Mel Teshco
    Rotorua, NZ
    Have You Read A Good Sci-Fi Romance Lately?