Posts Tagged ‘contest’

A Lifetime of Romance

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My latest Carina Press release FORBIDDEN DESIRES features three 90-something-year-old feisty women who are friends of Bella and Marcus. Are they based on anyone I know? Well…maybe a little.

My husband’s parents (also known as the outlaws) are 94 and 92, and they still love each other very, very much.

On our last visit, I was lucky enough to see Dad say goodnight to Mom before he went up to bed. He’s an early-to-bed, early-to-rise kind of guy, while she’s a night owl. He’d been teasing her all night with the kind of things long-married couples can get away with, sniping at each other good-naturedly. After a bit, he got tired and decided it was time for bed, so he walked over to her chair, bent down, and kissed her head.  But he wasn’t done yet. After telling her goodnight, he cupped her face with both hands and kissed her gently on the mouth. He told her he loved her, and then he went upstairs.

I’ll admit I watched the whole thing, and my eyes welled with tears. They have a love for the ages, one that’s weathered them through wars, personal tragedies, and incredibly lean times.

I couldn’t ask for any better example of a true, real-life, happily-ever-after couple than the outlaws. Over the years, I’ve caught them sneaking kisses in the kitchen, and they’re often holding hands. I won’t go into the time I saw Dad pinch Mom’s…. well, never mind. My husband didn’t want to hear about it. That was a “la-la-la-la-la….not listening” moment for him, but I loved it. I want that for us at their age. Who wouldn’t? Don’t you?

Would you like a chance to win an ePub copy of FORBIDDEN DESIRES? Leave a comment with the funniest, sweetest or kinkiest thing you’ve caught your elderly relatives doing, and I’ll randomly choose one winner to get a copy.

 

About Jodie:
Jodie Griffin didn’t always want to be a writer. She spent hours reading, but school papers were written one painful word at a time. One day, a story idea came, demanding to be put on paper. After several years of practice, she took the leap and submitted her first manuscript, and she hasn’t looked back since. Jodie’s own happily-ever-after includes one incredibly supportive husband and one future heroine. Jodie is also the author of FORBIDDEN FANTASIES, and is included in the anthology of THE THEORY OF ATTRACTION.  You can find Jodie on Facebook, Twitter, or at www.jodiegriffin.com.

Three Top Tips for Co-writing from Heidi Belleau & Violetta Vane

Hi, Carina blog readers! I’m Heidi Belleau. My co-writer Violetta Vane and I are the authors of the M/M urban fantasy The Druid Stone, which is out now from Carina Press. We’re often asked about how we co-write, from the nitty gritty of what programs we use through to how we settle disagreements. So here’s my top three tips for co-writing. If you’re co-writing a novel or are considering co-writing, I’m hoping this helps you get a grip on things! If you’re not a writer, I hope you enjoy this inside glimpse into the making of The Druid Stone.

1. Learn the tech

If you’re writing solo, chances are you have a preferred method of getting those words down. Maybe you like to handwrite in a notebook, then transfer to a computer. Maybe you use the classic Microsoft Word or the writer-friendly Scrivener. Maybe you prefer Write Or Die because it gives you extra motivation. Whatever choice you make, you came to that decision based on what works best for you. Co-writing is no different, except now your priorities have changed. The number-one most important feature becomes, “how do we share our work?”

For many authors, writing on Word with the “Track Changes” feature enabled is their go-to for co-writing. Write a bit, save the doc, email it to your co-writer when you’re done, and then they download it, write a bit more, save and email it back to you, rinse and repeat. Maybe one of you is responsible for a point of view each, or maybe you’ve planned things out and assigned each other chapters, and that’s how you determine when to trade off.

Violetta and I understand the appeal of that approach, but that’s not our thing. We like to write together in real-time, right down to editing each other’s sentences as we write them and finishing each other’s paragraphs. For that, we like Google Docs. In fact, we’re writing this blog post in Google Docs!

So how’s it work? We create a document that we then share. Sometimes we give beta readers access later on. Once we’ve done our pre-planning, we do a point by point breakdown of the chapter we’re working on and just start writing! The important thing is, Google Docs works for our purposes. We like to share, rather than delegate (although we do a bit of that, too), so e-mailing back and forth really doesn’t work for us. There are other programs for writing collaboratively, and each has its own strengths and weaknesses. Give them a try and see what works best for you!

And just as a side note, no matter what program you use initially, your eventual editors will be sending you a Word document with Track Changes on, which you can’t upload to GDocs or other collaborative services intact. So at some point, you’re going to have to work in Word (or a similar one-person-at-a-time processor). You can either email back and forth, taking pieces of the editing separately, or you can use a screensharing program, like we do. We like Teamviewer 6 (which is a bit laggy, but functional enough) or the built-in screensharing that comes with iChat if you have a Mac.

2. Communicate

I wrote a whole post on this for my individual blog, but the jist of it is this: co-writing is a creative and professional relationship. It’s taking something very personal to you (writing a book) and inviting another person into that sphere. If books are an author’s baby, then you are now co-parents. Congratulations! Now comes the hard part.

To mix my metaphor until it’s frothy, I want you to think back to… oh, every group project you ever did in school. Remember that feeling? Wondering who you were going to get paired with, wondering who was going to flake, dreading the thought that you were going to do all the work but your group members were going to get the same grade as you? Co-writing’s a little like that, except now money is involved. Luckily, unlike many school projects, you get to pick who you work with. You’re also both adults. Unluckily, adults can also be flakes or not do their fair share or be difficult to work with, even when it’s not intentional.

I can’t promise you’ll never have conflict or never pick the wrong person to co-write with, but I can give you advice to set you on the right track. Keep the lines of communication open from start to finish. Lay out your expectations. Ask questions. Talk about how you’re feeling. Set boundaries. Be open when something’s not working, but also be sure to compliment each other when something is. Co-writing comes with unique challenges, but it also comes with fantastic rewards. Being open and honest lets you make the most of both.

3. Be flexible – Conflict is good!

We create and design people from the ground up: their personalities, their appearances, their relationships. We control their every move. We may even muck about with their sex lives. Is it any wonder that authors might be a little bit… controlling? Like any artist, we often have a “vision”. We’re passionate about what we create and how. But unless you’ve hired out some kind of word-sandwich artist to write to your exact specifications, co-writing involves compromise. It involves disagreement. Sometimes passionate disagreement.

Now since you’re following tip two of this list and communicating effectively and respectively with your writing partner, you know that a clash of egos where you both go in intending to give no quarter isn’t gonna get anything written. You’re willing to hear each other out… but now what?

Did you know in an early draft of our novel The Druid Stone, the big Galway finale was meant to include a car chase? Violetta was absolutely mad about the idea. She had all these big grand plans and maps and, because she’s so very very visual, a big cinematic concept for the scene that could easily fit right into a blockbuster movie.

…And then I said no. No, that would take way too much explanation and logistics to get the car from Point A to Point B. No, have you ever seen an Irish city street. No, I just don’t think it fits the narrative as we’ve established it. Not surprisingly, she wasn’t too terribly pleased with my shutting her down, just as I haven’t been terribly pleased with her turning down my ideas. So she replied with “Well, we still need a big showpiece scene, so what do you suggest instead?” We talked it over, going back and forth on lots of different ideas, and eventually settled on the scene that’s in the final version.

Arguments and disagreements, as long as you both approach them professionally, can improve your writing. Only the strongest ideas survive. You work hard to convince the other person, and all that hard work shines through for the readers, too. A lot of the time, you come to a consensus or middle ground which is smarter and more unexpected and just plain better than what one person could come up with alone.

Sometimes you give up control. Sometimes you stand by your vision. Sometimes you fight it out until something new and brilliant emerges. Co-writing is chemistry. Sometimes your reactants just fizzle out, sometimes they explode, and sometimes they combine in that perfect way to make something really amazing (like chocolate chip cookies). It all comes down to what you’re mixing and how.

How about you? Have you ever co-written or considered co-writing? If you have, do you have other tips to share? And if you haven’t, why not? And readers, have you read any co-written novels you absolutely love? Ones under a single penname that you were surprised to hear were co-written after the fact?

About The Druid Stone

Sean never asked to be an O’Hara, and he didn’t ask to be cursed by one either.

After inheriting a hexed druid stone from his great-grandfather, Sean O’Hara starts reliving another man’s torture and death…every single night. And only one person can help.

Cormac Kelly runs a paranormal investigation business and doesn’t have time to deal with misinformed tourists like Sean. But Sean has real magic in his pocket, and even though Cormac is a descendant of legendary druids, he soon finds himself out of his depth…and not because Sean’s the first man he’s felt anything for in a long time.

The pair develop an unexpected and intensely sexual bond, but are threatened at every turn when Sean’s case attracts the unwelcome attention of the mad sidhe lords of ancient Ireland. When Sean and Cormac are thrust backward in time to Ireland’s violent history—and their own dark pasts—they must work together to escape the curse and save their fragile relationship.

The Druid Stone is available from Carina Press, Amazon, B&N and ARe. For other retailers and links to other stops on the blog tour, please visit knockmanovel.com. You can can also get in touch with Violetta and Heidi at their websites, or add us on twitter: @HeidiBelleau and @ViolettaVane.

 

Win a sterling silver Celtic triple spiral pendant!
The Celtic triple spiral is an ancient Irish symbol and an important recurring motif in The Druid Stone, and we’ve got a lovely silver version to give away to one lucky Carina reader! Leave us a comment here with your email and we’ll randomly select a winner on August 24th. We’ll contact the winner by e-mail on the day and arrange shipping to a mailing address of your choice to anywhere in North America. Bonne chance!

Congratulations to Fiona Lowe for her RITA win this weekend!

This past week, we’ve been at the Romance Writers of America National conference. On Saturday, the big awards ceremony was held and winners of the Golden Heart (unpublished) and RITAs (published) were announced. I am so thrilled to announce that Fiona Lowe and Carina Press became part of publishing history with a win for Boomerang Bride in Single Title Contemporary Romance. This year was the first year digital-first titles won the award, and Boomerang Bride became the first digital-first novel to win a RITA. We are thrilled to continue pioneering in digital-first publishing (and on a personal note, I’m still doing a little happy jig in my chair, feeling like the hard work spent promoting digital the past decade is paying off!) and we anticipate many more to come. We’ve always believed in our product, and our readers have shown us such an outpouring of support and love for our books, so it’s an extra bonus to be acknowledged with an award such as the RITA.

It was absolutely thrilling to be able to be a part of the awards ceremony with Fiona and accept on behalf of her fabulous editor, Charlotte Herscher. We’re so happy to have both Fiona and Charlotte as part of the Carina Press team, and we look forward to their next book together, SAVING THE BRIDE, which releases in 2013.

Thank you so much to RWA and all of those who judged the conference. We appreciate the opportunity, and the award!

In celebration of Fiona’s win, we’re offering Boomerang Bride at the reduced price of $3.89 for one week only, until next Monday. So if you haven’t had a chance to read this award-winning book that’s made publishing history, here’s your chance!

 

 

DISCOVERIES

Susan Edwards ~ Myth, Magic & Wonder

Covers White SeriesA couple days ago, I redesigned my banner for my website and sent it to my son who deals with my website.  I loved what I did but knew he’d find fault.  After all, he’s a programmer, which makes pleasing his sensibilities with my creativity nearly impossible.  And <sigh>, I was right.  He vetoed most of what I did which set me to wondering what happened to that creative little boy who along with his younger sister were responsible for me discovering my own writing talent.

You see, I haven’t always been a writer.  Unlike so many authors who say they’ve always loved writing, I had never wanted to write anything, except maybe chatty letters to friends or my great-grandmother (who loved receiving mail) or notes to pals in class.  Okay, I’ve dated myself here because I grew up without computers, emails, social media or text messages!  Writing entailed pen & paper or typewriter, neither of which works with my creative process.  Anyway, growing up I absolutely hated writing, did not excel in English and thought history the most boring subject on earth!  So it’s rather strange and ironic that not only am I a writer but I’ve published 12 historical romances.  Well, back to my little story here.

When my son was in grade school, his teachers were very impressed with his writing and his creative storytelling.  Same thing happened with my daughter.  Both kids were very creative and did very well at writing and telling stories.  I was mystified at where they got their talent but glad they enjoyed the writing experience.  Of course, we as a family were big readers so I figured that helped.

In that same time period, I was reading historical romances.  Mostly Native American/Westerns.  And I was getting bored with what was out there and had read most of what appealed to me.  Why wasn’t there more of what I want to read?  It was very frustrating, especially when I had this great idea for a story that I wanted to read and couldn’t because it wasn’t written.

And here it comes.  You see, I had two things going for me that led to my current writing career. First and foremost, I was, and still am, an avid reader of romance (write what you know). Second, I am a natural-born storyteller.  I can still remember using my dolls and stuffed animals to create stories and “situations” for them.  As I grew up, my need for storytelling did not fade away.  I had stories in my head day and night.

However, I did not think of them as stories or write them down or tell them to others.  I figured I was an oddity, that no one had scenarios playing in their heads that demanded that I pay attention to them.  But it turns out they were stories.  I created them, scene by scene.  I rewrote them then went back to individual scenes and rewrote again and again until I was satisfied.  Once a “story” was perfected, another story would take shape and the process would repeat.  Many times, an old story would return with the clarity of story in a book.  I could “re-read” it and make changes.  Even years later this could happen.

Of course, I figured I was just an incurable daydreamer.  My teachers and parents certainly thought so!  :-)   It wasn’t until I was in my 40’s and had already sold my first book that I discovered that my daydreaming was actually storytelling!  All the elements we writers require for our books were in my dream worlds.  I had the good guys, the bad guys, the conflict, the black moment and the happy-ever-after.   Does all this sound like a writer? Yep.

So here I am in those before-I-became-a-writer days, consuming books about strong heroines and handsome warriors like an ocean swallowing a beach until that idea came to me, that book I wanted to read and couldn’t.  There was a heroine who meets a young, virile Native American hero at stream.  This “story” kept intruding on my thoughts—more so than normal.   Also, I could not move this story forward to “the end” which was very strange as I could see these two characters so clearly: she was running away from an evil uncle, and my hero was a troubled young warrior.

Before I knew it I had a nice little scene going of these two people so in love and so right for each other.  And it was the perfect place to put them into a nice hot love scene.  But something was wrong.  First, this couple wanted more from me.  They were so insistent that I did something I’d never done before:   I took them out of my head and gave them life on paper (good thing I had a computer by this time).  Okay, I thought. I’ll write a nice, steamy love scene. I could see it, feel it, so no problem, end of story, right?

Wrong! Before I could write about these two people falling in love and having their happily-ever-after, I had to know more about them.

  • Why was my heroine alone in the wilderness?
  • Why was she fleeing her uncle? What did he want and how bad did he want it?
  • What troubled my warrior and why was he in the same vicinity as my heroine?
  • Why was he drawn to my heroine aside from her blonde hair? Why her and only her?
  • Was he willing to risk it all for her?

Before I knew what hit me, I had four chapters of back story.  I was shocked.  But it couldn’t possible be any good.  So I gave it to a couple of people to read.  One of my closest friends looked at me after she finished those chapters with awe in her face (I still remember that look) and she said two words that sealed my future:  Finish It.  The rest they say is history! The writer within was set free and an author was born!

I choose this topic for this blog because I never, ever considered writing to be a hidden talent.  I would have loved to see the looks on some of my old teachers faces, especially a couple of past high school English teachers as I’m pretty sure (as sure as there is always death and taxes in life) that none of them would have predicted that I would become a writer, let alone a published author.  And perhaps things would have been different had I not listened to that inner voice telling me to step out of my comfort zone and put that first story down on paper and take a chance that someone might read it.  Yes, it was scary to let others read it, and see what went through my mind.  But it was well worth it for I made an amazing discover about myself.

The path I set upon started with committing a story to paper.  But that was only one step of the process (aside from letting others read it).  It took me 3 years to finish the story between all the aspects of life, husband and children.  Add another 4 years of writing and rewriting and learning the craft of writing and submitting and getting rejection after rejection before an editor asked for a full manuscript. Add another year before I had my first offer, then yet another year before that first book, White Wind was on the bookshelves in 1996. Nine years total!   Wow!  It should come to no surprise to learn that I can be very stubborn and determined.

It’s now about 15 years later and once again I’m anticipating seeing my first book hit the shelves with a new cover in its new digital format with Carina Press. The excitement and anticipation is the same, as is the worry–will readers like my baby! Some things do not change!

So in retelling this story, it is my hope that someone reading this makes a self-discovery of their own.

Are you harboring a writer within? If so, what are you doing about it? I’d love to hear your “writer within” stories.

  • Have you discovered a hidden talent during your adult years?  If so, what and how do you feel about it.
  • Have you discovered something about yourself through your children?
  • What do you read, why and how does that genre make you feel?

Check out my website http://susanedwards.com where I have a contest running.  Sign up for my mailing list and I will enter you into a separate contest for a tote bag filled with goodies.  Winner will be drawn January 1st.    There 7 separate contests, each added to my website.

Book Trailer

Social Sites

http://susanedwardsauthor.blogspot.com/
http://twitter.com/susan_edwards
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Susan-Edwards/40226247104

Walking the SF Plank

Remember the execution scene in Return of the Jedi, when Luke and Han are forced to walk the plank over the Sarlacc Pit? Classic pulp sci-fi stuff. I mean there’s no way they can get out of that mess, right? R2?

Well, that scene gave me nightmares as a kid. The appalling odds (shut up, 3PO) of escape. Han’s blindness. The tentacles reaching up, dragging Boba Fett and others in for a gratuitous thousand-year digestion. Um, thanks for that one, George.

Cut to me as a thirty-year-old SF author inching my way along that same plank, about to submit my latest manuscript for publication. In my mind, the odds of doom are equally appalling—I trusted in Sparks in Cosmic Dust as I was writing it, but as soon as I let it go…I could practically hear the Sarlacc’s burp.

Nervous isn’t the word. All those months of outlining, worldbuilding, writing, editing and heeding Angela James’s sage ‘Before You Hit Send’ advice are now Bantha fodder because:

a) the story sucks
b) the title sucks
c) I suck
d) I should have concentrated more on the Romance & eased off on the SF
e) I should have concentrated more on the SF & eased off on the Romance
f) my writing style has gotten more juvenile than an Ewok
g) my writing style has gotten more cryptic than Yoda on peyote
h) Carina’s contemporary romances are selling HUGE
i) Carina’s straight SF (without the romance label) is selling…hey, there aren’t any yet!*

*in late 2010

After twenty published books, you’d think I’d have this confidence thing licked by now. Maybe if I stuck to one genre or conformed more to the mainstream, hitting send might get easier. In a way it has—I have a track record behind me, so if nothing else, I know my writing itself is ready for prime time. But these offbeat stories…man, they lead me out over the Sarlacc every goddamn time.

It’s exhilarating when the acceptance call or email comes in—in the case of Sparks, it was a double acceptance email (with SF novella Alien Velocity, March 2012)—but I’m telling you, any confidence I had while writing this novel, my longest at 87K, evaporated as soon as I’d finished polishing the synopsis. Doubt is an ever-present entity for an author. But so is faith is one’s creative abilities, deep down, the way the Force is for Luke Skywalker. It has to be. As desperate as things seem, he can ultimately find that calm centre telling him everything will work out fine if he believes in his ability to make it so. Sometimes that means taking hits, revising strategies, and growing a thicker skin in the process.

It also means taking chances and following them through no matter what. More than anything else, that’s what Sparks in Cosmic Dust means to me. No half measures. No compromises.

“Do or do not. There is no try.”

As it turned out, the Force was strong with me. Alissa Davis, my steampunk editor at Carina, isn’t keen on straight SF so she passed it on to Deb Nemeth, who loved it. Consequently, I now have two of the best editors I’ve ever worked with, in my two favourite genres.

Eat that, Sarlacc!

The final frontier is shrinking. Interstellar Planetary Administration sanctions are forcing the border colonies of deep space into extinction. Kappa Max is one of the last major cutthroat outposts, home to the lawless and the lonely…

Varinia Wilcox, the star attraction of a lucrative bordello gambling house.
Solomon Bodine, spurned by his lover and looking for distraction.
Clayton Barry, AWOL and a few drinks away from having to live in the gutter.
Lyssa Foaloak, a double-crossing criminal who’ll kill anyone for a few credits.

Four strangers, each with secrets that could cost them their freedom, are desperate to get off-planet. They meet Grace Peters, a cynical ex-doctor with an intriguing offer: a six-month trip to a faraway moon where she claims a stunning fortune awaits.

But this adventure is no easy escape. Danger, passion, secrets and madness await. Can they survive the mission, and each other, to make it out alive?

87,000 words

To celebrate the release of Sparks in Cosmic Dust, I’ve written a five-part look at the book’s development, from initial concept to publication. I’m also giving away one SF title from my back catalogue with each segment, ending with this special Sparks giveaway. The contests are all still live, and the winners will be announced on September 30th on my own blog: http://robertbappleton.blogspot.com

Here’s where you can find the other installments:

Part 1: Concept (Aug 31)—Contact: Infinite Futures Blog
Part 2: Character (Sep 13)—Mercurial Times (my blog)
Part 3: Worldbuilding (Sep 23)—Shawn Kupfer’s Blog
Part 4: The Writing Process (Sep 26)—Cathy Pegau’s Blog

With this final installment, I’m giving away an ebook copy of Sparks in Cosmic Dust. To enter, simply leave a comment on this blog post. Also, anyone who enters all five contests will automatically win an ebook of their choice (except Sparks) from my SF backlist.

Thanks and good luck!

Robert Appleton
www.robertappleton.co.uk
http://twitter.com/robertappleton

Psychic Tendencies

Hello! I’m Alanna Coca, romance author–I also write erotic romance as Olivia Brynn. Today I’m hacking Olivia’s Carina Press blog account so I can talk to you about my new release. PREVIEW is a romantic suspense with a psychic twist.

There’s a reason why I wrote this book.

I’ve always wanted to be psychic. I wanted to see ghosts and read minds.  I used to think I wanted to see the future too. But then I realized how hard it would be to live like that. If I knew I was going to spill grape juice on my white pants, would I avoid grape juice? Or white pants? If I knew I’d have a child who would end up murdered at a young age, would I still have the child? And what about knowing when and how I’ll meet my maker?

Yeah, seeing the future just isn’t for me.

When I was younger, I had a bit of a psychic connection to my mother. She always knew when I was getting into trouble. Seriously. I’m one of seven children, and I’m the only one who didn’t get away with anything. Of course I was the most rambunctious,  so that’s probably part of it. Okay, I’m rambling.

While I can’t see dead people, what I do have–and I’m sure many of you can say the same thing–are some really whacked-out dreams, and then I’ve dreamed a few things that ended up occurring days later. For example, I once woke up in a cold sweat after dreaming about a former boss of mine falling off the roof of a building and breaking his leg. I laughed it off, but three days later, as he was roofing, sure enough…the poor guy fell two stories and broke his femur. Then I felt guilty for not warning him. I’ve dreamed about friends becoming pregnant days before they make the announcement, and back in 2009 I dreamed about my neighbor being crushed by a refrigerator that he tried to move up a flight of stairs. This time I mentioned it to him, with an embarrassed laugh. He lost some color, and told me that he had just made plans with some friends to drag an old fridge out of his basement.

My dream convinced him to hire professionals. Now I can’t say that these were premonitions, but they sure made me wonder.

So that’s what inspired this book. Ryann Phillips, the heroine in my book PREVIEW, can see the future. Little snippets of events, involving complete strangers. Usually these dreams aren’t anything to worry about, but one night Ryann dreams about a murder, and she sets off to find the victim. And the murderer.

Romantic suspense is my favorite genre. Both to read and to write. I love twisty plots, and endings that make me want to flip back to the beginning and start all over, just to see what clues I missed.

Want more info? I’ve gathered everything about PREVIEW onto a page on my site. Come on over, read an excerpt, and watch the trailer.

What about you? Have any premonitions that came true? I’d love to hear about them. I’m nosy like that. Tell me your best dream, whether it was prophetic or not, and I’ll pick one dreamer from the comments to win a copy of PREVIEW.

Thanks for stopping by!

~Alanna

Website *  Twitter *  Facebook * Google+

Athletes Make The World Go Round

PhotobucketIn my first release for Carina, The Game Of Love, my hero and heroine are high school athletic coaches. Brett Wallace is a football coach (and a former pro). And Chris St. James is the new girls’ tennis coach at the same high school. Oh, and of course, she was a former pro too. Quite the complex situation, right?

They say write what you know. I don’t know who “they” are, but I think they have a good point here. I know sports. I was, in every sense of the word, a total JOCK in high school.

Okay, here’s your warning. I’m about to shamelessly show you a few pictures from said high school jock days. This is your chance to turn back. If you continue, you can’t say I didn’t warn you. Oh, and it’s okay. Feel free to mock me. Everything from high school is mock-worthy, if you ask me.

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I played varsity volleyball and tennis, and I loved every minute of it, especially tennis. Tennis was a huge part of my life. I have some fantastic memories from my time on the varsity tennis team…like our run for the state title my sophomore year. Or playing doubles with my best friend our senior year. And some disappointments…like losing in three sets in the state finals our senior year. But those disappointments only molded me into a better athlete, and a better person.

Not to mention…look at my legs! Yeah. Playing sports definitely keeps you in shape! Ah, to have my eighteen year old body again… And have you seen my hero on my cover? Uh, yeah. I’m not gonna be kicking him out of my bed anytime soon. Let’s face it. Athletes are hot. There’s nothing wrong with a character with a permanent case of the “dropsies” who couldn’t catch a beach ball if their puppy’s life depended on it. But something about a life-long athlete just really revs my engine.

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If you want to see how Brett gets Chris’s engine revved up, you can check out my campy book trailer HERE. (Hey, I never claimed to be Sophia Coppola!) You can get a taste of the story HERE with an excerpt reading by yours truly. Want more than just a taste? You can get the whole story right HERE!

To celebrate my two fictional coaches making their debut, I’ve put together a very real Coaching Kit (pictured below). It includes a cute clipboard, a stopwatch, whistle, football, can of tennis balls, The Tennis Lover’s Book of Wisdom, and The Game of Love Playbook. And you can win this bundle by simply answering one question: What sport (and its athletes) gets your motor running? Do you have a secret lusting for a man who can swing a (golf) club? A major desire to go ruck with a rugby star? Feverish dreams of playing tonsil hockey with a goalie? Can’t stop watching the women’s beach volleyball…uniforms? Leave a comment, and one lucky winner (via random drawing) will receive this entire package! Contest ends August 31st, 11:59pm Eastern time.

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Jeanette Murray is a contemporary romance writer who lives with her sweet & sassy little girl, a dumber-than-expected Goldendoodle and her husband. She loves to post pictures on Facebook, she tweets whatever’s on her mind, and she blogs on the regular. Head on over to www.JeanetteMurray.com to find out more about the author, the books, the dog, or all the above.

Reunited Lovers

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I’ve always loved the reunited lovers theme in romance, regardless of subgenre. The romance always starts off with tension because there had to be a reason these two lovers couldn’t make it the first time. Sometimes it’s something as simple as they were too young to know what they wanted in life. Or, the families of the couple tore them apart. Maybe time and distance proved to be too much. Secrets, lies or insecurities managed to cut through their relationship. One of the characters thought they were protecting the other by walking away … Whatever the reason, the couple once loved each other, or cared deeply for each other, and now they’re finally getting their second chance!

In the case of DEADLY OBSESSION Lilly and Braden were high school sweethearts but were torn apart because of secrets. Both went their separate ways and both ended up in law enforcement. After years in the military, Braden is now the sheriff of the fictional town of Hudson Bay and Lilly is an NSA agent suffering from PTSD.

Circumstances force them together and even though a decade has passed since they’ve seen each other, the attraction and tension between them is hotter than it was before. With a homicidal maniac taunting them at every turn, they’re fighting for their lives and a second chance at love.

What are some of your favorite reunited lovers’ stories? Feel free to share titles. Or if not that theme, what are some of your favorite themes in romance and why? One commenter will be selected to win a digital copy of Deadly Obsession. The winner will be announced in the comments section of this blog post on Friday, August 19 2011 with instructions how to contact me.

(Contest open to all readers, 18 years or older, who are legally allowed to participate in such a contest as allowed by their local laws. By participating in the contest, participants agree to be bound by the decision of the contest sponsor.)

Deadly Obsession now available:

The chilling words of a killer: This is just the beginning…

Ten years ago, Lilly Carmichael left town without an explanation, breaking Braden Donnelly’s heart. The death of her aunt has brought Lilly home–and face to face with memories she thought were long buried. Still getting over a traumatic incident from her work as an NSA agent, Lilly initially dismisses the face at her window as a figment of stress-induced paranoia.

Now the sheriff of Hudson Bay, Braden has spent the last year hunting a sadistic murderer. But his investigation is turned upside down when new evidence indicates that Lilly is the killer’s next target. Determined to protect the woman he’s never stopped loving, Braden must race against the clock to trap a dangerous psychopath—before it’s too late…

A little about me: I’ve been reading romance since I discovered my mom’s hidden stash at a young age and the addiction stayed with me into adulthood. I write dark paranormal romance and sexy romantic suspense. Deadly Obsession is my most recent release from Carina Press. I also write for Harlequin Nocturne (Destined Mate, October 2011), and in early 2012 the first book in my paranormal series will release from NAL/Signet Eclipse. To learn more about me please visit my website, my blog, facebook or find me on twitter @katiereus.

The Shoeless Kid and the Lonely Highway

So, you’re driving along on the Alaska Highway in that long twilight that is the summer “night” in the Yukon, and you see a shoe on the side of the road. Just one. It’s a sneaker. And as you drive past, you find yourself wondering, “How the heck do you lose just one shoe? Wouldn’t you notice?”

Then, with the shoe rapidly shrinking in your rearview mirror, you find yourself coming up with scenarios. Maybe the driver stopped to get something in the back seat and the shoe fell out of the over-packed car, unnoticed. Maybe a hitchhiker tied his spare sneakers to the outside of his backpack and one fell off when he ran to catch a ride. Maybe a panel truck with a load of stolen shoes hit a bump and a box fell out…

Anyway. That was the germ for The Shoeless Kid, my latest mystery with Carina Press. Idle speculation on a long summer evening in the Yukon. From there I came up with Josh, the kid, and Kate, the new Chief of Police in Mendenhall, a small town in Manitoba. I had a blast writing about Kate trying to make a detachment of resentful police officers work for her and not against her. I’ve grown fond of her and of Marco, the very young, very good looking rookie who ends up being her only back up in that oh-so-tense police detachment.

~CONTEST~ Now I find myself wondering what other scenarios I could have come up with for that lonely shoe abandoned on the highway. What do you think? Any ideas how shoes end up on roadways, alone and pathetic? Share your ideas in the comments section for a chance to win a copy of The Shoeless Kid. I’ll draw a name on Friday, May 20, so you have until then!

Come visit Kate Williams, my tough-and-none-too-patient heroine in The Shoeless Kid, as she tries to unravel the mystery surrounding a missing child. And don’t forget to check out my Carina colleagues who are also releasing books this week: Jennifer Greene’s Sweets to the Sweet and Maureen Miller’s Endless Night.

Marcelle

www.marcelledube.com

THE SHOELESS KID

The shoe appeared on her desk, gently deposited on top of the pile of occurrence reports from the last week.

It was a kid’s high-top—left foot—and it was red and grubby, but not worn.

Kate automatically picked it up, more to keep it from dirtying her paperwork than out of curiosity. It was damp. On the inside of the tongue, in red marker, was written “Josh H.” She flipped the shoe over to look at the underside. A size four. It would fit a…what? A four- or five-year-old?

Bobby MacAllister’s age.

She slowly looked up. Marco Trepalli, youngest and newest member of the Mendenhall police force—and too handsome for his own good—smiled down at her. The morning sun gilded his tanned cheek and added a twinkle to his eye. Kate stifled a sigh. Marco had the makings of a good cop, if he ever learned to get over himself.

Buy THE SHOELESS KID here

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Marcelle Dubé grew up near Montreal but now lives in the Yukon, where people outnumber the carnivores, but not by much. She writes science fiction, fantasy and mainstream short stories and novels, and has been featured in magazines and an award-winning anthology. The Shoeless Kid is her second novel with Carina Press. Her first, On Her Trail, was published in 2010.

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Viva Las Vegas! Contest

To celebrate the release of Lying Eyes, I’d love to take every one of you on a trip to fabulous Las Vegas.  I’d love to, that is, but I don’t make that kind of money.

Instead, I’ve designed the following contest.  Below are a number of statements. Some are about Vegas. Some are about things that happen in Lying Eyes. Some have nothing to do with anything.  For every statement you can honestly agree with, give yourself a point.  At the end, leave a comment and include your total points scored.

Of course, this is all based on the honor system, so to prevent anyone from lying (the book is called Lying Eyes…), I’ll just randomly draw from a name from the comments as the winner.

Prize: Digital editions of Las Vegas-set  Lying Eyes by Amy Atwell and Caddy Girls by V.K. Sykes.

Comments taken up until midnight EST.  I’ll post the winner on this comment thread Thursday morning.

Ready to play?  Have fun!  I’ve listed my answer (Y, N) after each question.

1. I’ve flown into/out of/through McCarran Airport in Las Vegas. (Y, lots)

2. I know the name of the hotel that looks like a pyramid. (Y, stayed there)

3. I’ve seen a Cirque du Soleil show (this is a gimme, you don’t even need to have seen it IN Las Vegas). (Y, x3, at least)

4. I’ve ridden in a muscle car. (Y, years ago.)

5. I can name three of the Rat Pack. (Y, can’t you?)

6. I’ve watched the World Poker Tour on television. (Y, but I prefer blackjack.)

7. I recognize interiors of the Bellagio from Ocean’s Eleven. (Y, but they’ve remodeled since the movie was made.)

8. I’ve visited Fremont Street and seen the light show. (Y, brilliant and LOUD.)

9. I’ve ridden a CAT bus down Las Vegas Boulevard. (Y, and it’s faster to walk, depending on traffic.)

10. I’ve been to the top of the Eiffel Tower. (In Vegas, Y, in Paris, N)

11. I’ve been to a spa for a massage. (Can I go now? Oh, Y)

12. I own a rabbit. (Currently? N, do cats count?)

13. I’ve seen the Bellagio Fountains.  (Another gimme, here’s a link to YouTube) (Y)

14. I’ve seen an Elvis impersonator. (Y, and he was pretty good)

15. I’ve lost $20 in a slot machine.  (Oh, were it only $20…) (Y)

16. I’ve eaten a $60 Kobe steak and truffle burger. (N, but my husband has.)

17. Between Penn and Teller, I know which is the silent one. (Y, and they’re both a riot!)

18. I would pay $250 per ticket to see Celine Dion at Caesar’s Palace Coliseum (Pony up, she’s returning next March!). (N, but I’m sorry I missed Elton John.)

19. I’ve been to a rodeo. (N, but I’m going in December, woohoo!)

20. I can shuffle cards. (Y, but I’m told I shuffle like a girl…)

21. I’ve always wanted to run like a lunatic through a casino but was afraid I’d get arrested. (What kind of question is THIS???)

22. I can name the largest hotel in the world (Hint, it’s the Venetian in Vegas. Um, I can NOW.) (Y)

23. If you’ve taken the quiz this far, give yourself 43 extra points. (Woo Hoo! 43 points! Uh oh, must do MATH…)

24. I’ve ridden the X-Scream ride at the top of the Stratosphere—and I didn’t throw up.  (N, N, and No) (I’m throwing up now at the thought.)

25. I own a piece of high-end costume jewelry. (Y, thanks to Swarovski–and my husband.)

How’d you do??  Don’t forget to report your score.  I got around 60 points, give or take. (Hey, math is not my strong suit.) Hope you’ll consider a Vegas vacation sometime soon.  I can recommend a great getaway read!

Amy Atwell worked in professional theater for 15 years before turning from the stage to the page to write fiction. She now gives her imagination free rein in both contemporary and historical stories that combine adventure and romance. An Ohio native, Amy has lived all across the country–though never Las Vegas–and now resides on a barrier island in Florida with her husband and two Russian Blues. Visit her online at her www.amyatwell.comWhat’s The Story? and Magical Musings blogs,FacebookTwitter and/or GoodReads.