Showing posts with label novels. Show all posts
Showing posts with label novels. Show all posts

Monday, February 16, 2015

WHY EVERY NOVEL SHOULD HAVE A PIECE OF YOU IN IT

WHY EVERY NOVEL SHOULD HAVE A  PIECE OF YOU IN IT
 

    I bet you're looking at the title of this post and wondering what kind of outlandish foolishness I'm proposing. Before you write me off let me explain. I'm currently writing my sixth full length novel and I think I've discovered some pretty amazing things as I continue to write and build my portfolio. What has occupied my thoughts lately is how every novel I've written contains a piece of me. What do I mean by that? With every finished novel I've either written about some past experience, a secret side to myself, my personality traits, a dream or fantasy I've had, my deepest pain or greatest desire and finally a chance to live life vicariously through someone else.

    So what point am I making? Every thing you write should have a piece of you in. When you look back over your body of work, you should be able to see a theme, or pick out a certain issue that was on your mind when you wrote it. Let me give you a few examples.

GODDESS OF LEGEND
     In my very first novel my heroine was so like me. Cameryn struggled with her self image and always felt that she was different or out of place. These are issues I've dealt with my entire life so while Cameryn Kane is her own woman, she is also very much a part of me.

GODDESS BY CHANCE
     In my fourth novel, my heroine is strong willed and has a mother of an equally strong will. Arienne just wants to live her life on her own terms without feeling like she has to measure up to what her mother expects of her. Arienne is me. My mother and I are both strong willed women and we butt heads on the exact same issues as my heroine and her mother do. Life and art are truly one with this novel.

MY CURRENT WIP
    In this sexy romantic suspense novel I'm exploring what it would be like to be a woman at the very top in a traditionally male domain, having the power to do whatever you want with no consequences and the joys of being with a younger man. This novel is all about exploring a fantasy and living vicariously through someone else.

     Now do you see what I mean? With everything I write I can identify some subliminal thing that gets put into my novels. So when you pick up that pen or sit down at your keyboard, next time think about what little piece of you that you'd like to share with your readers. Sharing is caring and while you're creating your own little world you could be making a real difference in someone else's.

What are some common things or issues you've explored in your writing? What have you written that hits the closest to home in your life?


Monday, January 5, 2015

THE YEAR IN REVIEW & LOOKING FORWARD TO 2015

THE YEAR IN REVIEW & LOOKING FORWARD TO 2015
 

Happy New Year everyone. I'm back from vacation. At the end of every year you look back over everything that happened and you make goals for the next year. At least I do, when it comes to writing anyway. When it comes to my life Jesus take the wheel. But I digress. Despite some setbacks and unforeseen things, 2014 was pretty good to me as I continued on the road towards being a professional author.

January- I was blessed to sign with an agent, Nikki Terpilowski of Holloway Literary Agency. In a day and age where getting picked up by an agent is still a hard thing to do, I remain ever so grateful.

April- I complete the second novel in my Demi-God Daughters series, Goddess by Chance.

August- I complete my fifth novel, my first mob romance, Dirty Little Secrets.

November- Goddess by Chance is released by Evernight Publishing.

December- Dirty Little Secrets is sold to Samhain Publishing and expected to release Summer 2015.

So looking back over 2014, things were pretty darn good. I wrote 2 novels and both those novels have homes. I signed with an agent at the beginning of the year and by the end she had me a book deal. Yes 2014 was good to me in the pursuit of my dreams and I hope 2015 continues to be even better.

MY 2015 GOALS

1. To finish my second mob romance, Devious Little Lies and find a publishing home for it.
2. To start and complete my third Demi-god Daughters novel, Goddess by Surrender and find it a home at Evernight Publishing with the others in my series.
3. To finish Siren's Embrace, the second in my Mermaids of Astaeria series that has yet to find a publishing home. But I'm passionate about this story and this series and even if it does not find a traditional publishing home I will self publish it myself.
4. And if I'm really, super ambitious maybe I can start on the 1st novel in an edgy, contemporary romance series called Fated.

That's a lot in addition to keeping up my grades in nursing school so I can graduate, studying to pass my boards, looking for a job and hoping Mr. Right will finally decide to show up. It's a lot, but when you have a passion you have to put in the work to make sure that it goes somewhere and I intend to do just that.

 I hope you all have an awesome year. What are you looking forward to in 2015? Let me know.





Wednesday, January 22, 2014

WHAT'S WRONG WITH A LITTLE SUPPORT?

WHAT'S WRONG WITH A LITTLE SUPPORT?
 
 


  Ever since I started my journey into the wonderful world of writing, I've been amazed at the some of the wonderful people I've met along the way. When I decided that I wanted to be serious about pursuing a writing career, it was the first time in my life that I seemed to actually meet likeminded people like myself. It was amazing to discover that I am not alone in the universe like I sometimes tend to think I am. I've even made some new friends. But with every rose, there are thorns. One of the things I'm noticing is that many times support in the writing world is not reciprocated.

   Maybe about a month or two ago I decided that I was going to tweet the links to books that were out or coming out by other authors I follow. Many of them are indie authors. So I thought a tweet doesn't hurt anyone. So I spent about half an hour finding the links to their books on Amazon and individually tagging the authors and tweeting their links. So a few said thank you. I appreciate that, but the only authors who returned the favor were authors I've already built a pretty good relationship with. I admit. I was a little pissed off.

    I feel like this, if I take the time out of my day to show support for your novel which many times I haven't even read yet, as a courtesy you should be willing to do the same for me. I re-tweet things all the time on Twitter. Much of the time it is other author's stuff. I have no problem showing support. It's much needed, especially because sometimes this writing journey can be a lonely one. So don't be stingy with the re-tweets. Even though you may not be a particular fan of another's work, maybe some of your followers will be. By a simple re-tweet you possibly could've helped a fellow author get a sell they may not have gotten.

   I have discovered some really great authors, just from someone else re-tweeting the links for their books. Among them @Eden_byNite @PerriForrest @KseniaAnske @EllisRomance. A re-tweet never hurt anyone. I firmly believe that if I'm not willing to embrace those that are out here on this path with me and help in anyway I know how I might not be so blessed with my own works, but that's just me.

   I know some will say that it's not their job to support another author. They have their own stuff to do. They're right. It's not your "job" to support another writer. But if you're strolling down your timeline and see something it's not going to kill you to re-tweet it. After all you're going to want someone else to show you that same courtesy. (Use discretion though. Nothing is more annoying than a stream of constant of re-tweets though.)

   So I hope I've given you something to ponder the next time you're scrolling through your timeline. Just remember The Golden Rule: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you.


Wednesday, September 18, 2013

AN INTERVIEW WITH AUTHORESS PERRI FORREST

         AN INTERVIEW WITH AUTHORESS PERRI FORREST



     Today I am pleased to host Ms. Perri Forrest on my blog. Perri and I connected on Twitter and became fast friends. Not only is she funny, and a sweetheart, but she is also a talented writer and is in the process of building her own empire. Her writing is thought-provoking, heart-wrenching and multicultural. As she once told me, she doesn't write urban novels. She writes suburban novels. Take a minute and enjoy the interview I did with this lovely lady. And don't forget to check out her various works.


AN INTERVIEW WITH PERRI FORREST

Ladies and gentlemen today I am happy to have with me Ms. Perri Forrest, the author of Revolving Doors, Rendezvous, & The Color of Lies.

Q: Perri thank you so much for taking the time out to talk with me today. To start with tell us a little bit about yourself. I am a passionate individual who loves to write, who is obsessed with miniature golf/badminton, and who is a perfectionist. I am addicted to knowledge, and attracted to intellect. There’s nothing sexier than a man who is intelligent…genuinely intelligent. I’m vocal and will defend my point to the death. Anyone in my immediate circle will attest to that. I’m a person who explicates just about everything when it comes to inspirational quotes – or any quotes for that matter. I think people say, and post things all the time just because they sound good without really challenging the words or looking at it critically. I don’t care whose quote it is, I need to fully assess it first before I go, “Liking/Sharing”, or otherwise. Oh! I’m an admitted control freak. And a Leo. I think that’s it. No, wait! I love life and am the kind of person who will come down really hard on myself if I feel like I’ve gone through the day without identifying something different/new about myself and those around me. Weird, huh?

Q: When did you first realize you wanted to become an author?
I’ve known I wanted to be an author since I was 12 years old. I used to write short stories with two primary themes: 1) Walking through the woods with a group of friends and finding a magical cottage with a little old lady inside telling really magical stories about the future. I remember once we got inside her house it would be glamorous and way bigger than it looked from the outside. I was really living a dream through these stories and I saw it metaphorically. It was a picture of how I saw my life at that time, versus what I wanted it to look like. Probably my obsession with glamour. 2) I also wrote a lot of stories about kids with invisible friends, though I didn’t have one myself J I think I needed one to help curb that overactive imagination.

Q: What is the most frustrating thing about being a writer?
The most frustrating part about writing to me, is not the actual writing itself, but the worrying about whether anyone will like my work or not. So much so that whenever I write a story, I never go back and read it again for fear I will find something that would give any reader ammunition to hate me and chalk me up to a wannabe. Don’t get me wrong, I know I can write and I have total faith in my writing, it’s the “acceptance” factor. I’m slowly shaking that and simply reveling in a place of finding comfort in the fact that I’m writing after having put it off so long because of fear.

Q: Are you a pantser or plotter? 100% #TeamPantser!

Q: When you think up a story idea do you concentrate on characters first or the storyline? I tend to concentrate on a single character first, and build a story around that person.

Q: So tell us a bit about your two novellas Rendezvous, & The Color of Lies? Where did the inspiration for these novellas come from? Oh! I love talking about that! Rendezvous was actually part of an anthology with the instruction to just “go for itmake it no longer than 10,000 wordssetting Mardi Grasstart it out with a bang!” Enter the limousine scene. I came up with the bang first and built from there. I had a complete ball writing that story because it took even me to another place and it was what I wanted for the reader as well. Gabriella Alexis Sandoval, the main character in my debut novel, was introduced in this novella. Rendezvous tells a small portion of her life – the secret portion of her life – and that is her time spent in Brazil as a high priced call girl. This particular piece of her lifestyle is something that she’s held onto since a young adult because it was a release there for her during a tumultuous time in her life. She has her own wealth and a full life outside of that secret life, but continues it because for her it’s a place of comfort for her that was there for her when she felt she was at the end.

Now The Color of Lies is my absolute favorite story. I think it’s my favorite because of how it was developed. There are so many memories with that story. Let’s begin with the fact that it was written in four days out of a nervous energy. Imagine working every day all day on a book and then all of a sudden you’re done. It’s the one thing you’ve done every day for months – morning, noon, and night. Then it’s off to be edited and you’re inside your own head about what the feedback will be and wondering if the editors and beta readers will hate it. Since I’m a girl who wants the truth, and sugarcoating, I was prepared for the worst and I had nowhere to put that energy. So what did I do? I wrote a story and honestly as I wrote TCoL, it flowed so fluidly I was scared. That had never happened to me before and I was deathly afraid of what it meant instead of embracing it as a talent (something I have a hard time doing). The story has several characters, but its focus is on an agency called Pandora’s Box that outs the cheaters of the world. In this particular installment, we had Erik Warren a super dog! He is a married man living a single life and when his wife’s women’s intuition kicks in, she enlists the help of the beautiful Brooklyn Kellogg, and her agency to get to the bottom of things. The Color of Lies is my best seller to date, ironically and I am currently at work on the next installment which closes up some loose ends with a few characters, and introduces some new ones along the way. 

Q: What made you decide to continue Gabriella’s story in Revolving Doors? I knew early on that I wanted to give her a full story. I wanted to read her story! Lol! I wanted to see what led her to that secret life in Brazil, and what else she had going on in addition to that life. Gabriella told me that she wanted her story told and it was my job to tell it. There’s depth to her and it needed to be revealed alongside her life at the beautiful resort of Belo Paraiso. I wanted to tell the story of how heartbreak led her to become one of Valentina’s girls, how she found herself there, and how she developed as both a woman and a businesswoman from that experience.

Q: What do you want readers to take away from your work? I want them to see that I work extremely hard to make my stories, and characters individuals. I don’t look at other author’s characters and take from them, I build these characters…these stories from scratch, and I feel that I owe it to them to tell their stories as thorough as possible, from the glorious to the imperfections. I want them to take from my work that I put my all into it because it’s important for me that I deliver a fine piece of work.

Q: What was your road to publication like? What made you choose the self-publishing route? I haven’t had a road, per se. I just got in my car and drove, and am still driving until I reach a destination. I will say that the beginnings were awesome in how it all came to be. It came in the form of, “you never know who’s watching.” Literally. I used to blog heavily. I’ve since retired that blog (but will resurrect it one day soon), and had a pretty decent following. Well, there was one follower who I didn’t even realize was watching my work. Never commented, never emailed, but I knew she was a follower because I kept up with that list of people, for the sake of seeing who my audience was. After about two years of blogging, I received a message one day from her asking me if I’d like to participate in an anthology. I was so green that before I responded, I had to look up what that even was. I have always been an avid reader, but had only ever read complete novels, so wasn’t up on the lingo. As soon as I got the definition, I responded back with, “you know I’ve never published anything before, right?” to which she responded, “well you should. I’ve followed your blog for years now and you can write!” I think I started crying at that moment in front of my keyboard. It was the first time that my writing had been officially validated, and it felt good. It was years in the making.

With the self-publishing route, I decided that it would be much more effective for me to just write and get editing and publish my works to get my name out there, rather than wait for weeks, months, and YEARS, to find a Literary Agent who believed in me to get behind my work, or a huge publishing house that already has their focuses on a particular genre of work. I wanted to see who Perri was first before I introduced her to that population of individuals. It was kind of like finding myself, and building my brand before I got my “30 seconds to tell me your story,” type deal going. I want to get to a place where if I meet someone in the Literary world one day, I can tell them without blinking, why I’m their girl and be able to sell that with confidence and truth. Right now, I’m figuring out where I fit and thus far, I can tell it isn’t in any one box so I need to figure out how to clearly articulate that. I do feel that my day is near though. It isn’t wishful thinking, I just feel it. I’m hardworking and this writing thing is what I would for free, so I know I’ve found my purpose.

Q: What’s easier for you? Writing the first draft or editing? Definitely the first draft! Which brings me to something that is so embarrassing to talk about. Don’t judge me when I tell you! Lol! Okay, so you know how when we get our first jobs we are so new to everything? Well, when I got my first job I started it in I believe May. One day I was talking to the office manager and asked her, what day do we begin our summer break? I just remember her staring at me for the longest time and then as clearly as she could explaining to me that grown ups don’t get summer breaks. I think she wanted to laugh, but when she saw the seriousness in my demeanor, she decided against it. What does that have to do with the question? Well, let me first answer the question and say that “first draft,” is easier. Then, I’ll tell you that I was under the impression that when it got sent off, that the editor would make the changes for me! I had no idea that I’d have to get that beast back and do more work! Not once thinking that if I allowed someone else to make said changes, it is no longer my story! Whatever, don’t judge me. I told you. I was as green as Kermit!

Q: What’s coming down the pipeline next? I’m finishing the second installment of the Pandora’s Box series and have just ordered the cover for the 3rd installment so those are back to back projects that I plan to deliver on before Thanksgiving. Then I’ve gotten a lot of feedback lately for Revolving Doors and am going to begin mapping out a sequel to that. It may be a bit shorter, and in fact I may make them into smaller series of one another versus trying to tackle a full novel again. I think I might have tackled a complete novel too early in my career. A Type-A like myself needed to start small. I am too much of a perfectionist! I was actually reading and re-reading while the book was gone to editors. It made the work more difficult for me because I was finding errors that I knew they would find and fixing them before they came back so the cross-referencing process was a bit tedious. Thank God for dual monitors!

Q: Besides writing are there any other hidden talents you have? Oh boy…let’s see. I LOVE to build Wix websites. I like watching them come to life. I love writing business proposals. For some reason a lot of people come to me for advice in their relationships. I read somewhere that the people with the best advice are the ones who have been through a lot. That would be me, so maybe they sense that when they come. I hear I’m pretty good too. I braid hair. I keep that a huge secret though, but I’ve been braiding hair professionally since I was a young girl. There’s actually really good money in that. Okay here’s one that some might find a bit weird, but that I’m very proud of…explicating dreams. I love helping people decipher their dream’s meanings.

Q: Before we go what’s your advice to aspiring writers? I would say more than anything don’t try to impress others before impressing yourself because then you begin to lose touch with your organic writing voice. I did that for a bit – and in some ways am still trying to get away from it. In my case, it almost made me not want to write anymore. I’m thankful that didn’t happen. I think that aspiring writers should just write from the heart and that no matter what comes during their day, to make sure they at least give a part of that day to writing something! Keep the ideas fresh and flowing. Even if it’s building a dream character on paper, just write. It’s the most important thing you could for your career. Also try as hard as possible to surround yourself with like people of like minds. Don’t get so caught up in the popularity game that you allow anybody into your space. If they must be deleted, do so. Add and follow the ones who want to see you do well. Seek healthy relationships that you can learn from and grow with. When I entered this world, I automatically expected others to embrace me and that didn’t happen so I had to feel my way around – much like everyday relationships. There will be trial and error, but at the end as long as you have a healthy balance of genuine people, it will be worth the trouble.

Q: Where can readers find out more about you and your works? The best place to go would be to my website: www.perriforrest.com. There you can find what I have up to date, complete with links to their location.

Thank you so much for your time today Perri. I look forward to more from you.