Monday, September 8, 2014
Romance Writers Weekly Blog Hop
It's time again for the Romance Writers Weekly blog hop from romance writers from all over the globe. Each week, many of us answer the same three questions so you can get a fun peek into a writer's mind. I submitted this week's questions. Here they are:
1.What’s your favorite aspect of novel writing? Dialogue? Setting? Conflict? Narration? Explain.
By far, my favorite aspect of novel writing is dialogue. I write character-driven and dialogue-driven novels. I especially love creating nasty characters and have a lot of fun writing from a male point of view. I get bored when a novel is too flowery, has a lot of backstory, and narration. I like to get right to the action. I want readers to feel like they are in the scene and to have a hard time putting my book down. That said, I also adore throwing conflict at my characters. I say the more plot twists the better!
2.How do you choose the setting for your plot? Are they always similar settings or does it vary? (i.e., small town, big city, castle, etc.)
I write contemporary novels--women's fiction, romantic suspense and contemporary romance. My debut novel, THURSDAYS AT COCONUTS, is set in a fictional town, Crystal City, and is modeled after a mid-sized town in Missouri where I grew up. However, my sequel will have several chapters devoted to small-town life. I've never written about a small town before, but my grandmother lived in one and my parents do now. Life is a much slower pace in my yet-to-be-named tiny town, and some of my characters need that, believe me. Others are going to hate it, however. Fair warning!
3.I’m a big six-word memoir fan. (Hemingway even wrote one.) Describe your writing day using just six words.
Coffee. Facebook. Email. Coffee. Facebook. Write.
What it should be:
Trudge to coffee pot. Start writing.
If you haven't tried six-word memoirs, you should! My memoirs are in three six-word memoir collections--two books and one calendar. It's great fun. Celebrities and famous authors get involved. Warning: They're highly addictive. http://smithmag.net
So what is your favorite aspect of novel writing? Which settings do you prefer? Tell me and then be sure to visit other RWW bloggers, Leslie Hachtel http://lesliehachtelwriter.wordpress.com and Eden Ashe http://edenashe.com.
Wednesday, August 27, 2014
THURSDAYS AT COCONUTS is here!

The great news is THURSDAYS AT COCONUTS is now available on Amazon as an ebook for just $2.99 (cheaper than a fancy cup of coffee at Starbucks) and I'm thrilled to say it has garnered 20 amazing reviews in less than two weeks. The majority are from complete strangers! It's surreal. I know that's an overused word but it is. Don't pinch me if I'm dreaming.
My publisher is Soul Mate Publishing from New York and I'm eternally grateful they believed in me and my story. In fact, I thanked them as well as a TON of other people on the Acknowledgement Page. You might be one of them but you'll have to get a copy before you can take a peek. Here's the buy link where you can read five chapters to get a feel for my novel: tinyurl.com/l9m26ht
THURSDAYS AT COCONUTS is women's fiction at its core but has many elements of romance and mystery. I love plot twists and surprising the reader. I can almost guarantee you'll be surprised while reading it.
To celebrate the release, I had a big launch party on Facebook. It was a virtual party where I had contests to win swag and gift cards. It was on my birthday, August 14, so that added to the fun. I'll talk more about the virtual party and swag in another post. For now, I'm enjoying the ride. A huge thanks to everyone for their support, downloads, and reviews. I wish we could all meet on a Thursday at Coconuts so I could buy a round of drinks!
Saturday, August 2, 2014
Two-Line Promotional Hooks
My editor at Soul Mate Publishing asked me to write a two-line hook for THURSDAYS AT COCONUTS. She'll use this for promoting my novel online. I'm not sure why but this is really HARD--almost as difficult as writing the back cover blurb but not nearly as bad as the dreaded synopsis.
Still, I could use your input. I thought we could have a little fun. How about helping me with this? Let me know which hook "grabs" you. Which one would entice you to know more about (or hopefully purchase) my novel? I've written five hooks below. They are in no particular order. Please vote for your favorite in the comments.
#2
Best friends. Sexy cops. Hippies. Neurotic brides.
It’s complicated.
#3
A wedding planner, bad-boy cop, neurotic brides, and hippies.
Not your everyday romance.
A counselor who enables her hippie parents. It’s complicated.
Still, I could use your input. I thought we could have a little fun. How about helping me with this? Let me know which hook "grabs" you. Which one would entice you to know more about (or hopefully purchase) my novel? I've written five hooks below. They are in no particular order. Please vote for your favorite in the comments.
#1
Best friends, hippies, neurotic brides, and sexy cops.
What could go wrong?
Best friends, hippies, neurotic brides, and sexy cops.
What could go wrong?
#2
Best friends. Sexy cops. Hippies. Neurotic brides.
It’s complicated.
#3
A wedding planner, bad-boy cop, neurotic brides, and hippies.
Not your everyday romance.
#4
A wedding planner who can’t find wedded bliss. A banker
involved with a bad-boy cop.A counselor who enables her hippie parents. It’s complicated.
#5
Best friends and wine solve everything—bad-boy cops,
bitter betrayals, hippie parents, and neurotic brides. Bring it on.
I'll be eager to see which one comes out on top. Thanks for your input!
Thursday, July 31, 2014
#AmEditing

I am now working on the final galley for THURSDAYS AT COCONUTS so this is the LAST go-around before the ARC (Advanced Reader Copy). I'm very nervous about this process. I hate typos but we're human and they're inevitable. I decided to have a print copy made and bound but the print is so light I am straining my eyes. I don't have time to have it redone and didn't bother looking at my printed masterpiece(!!) at the store. Oy.
I've learned many things from my talented Soul Mate Publishing senior editor, Debby, and will share those with you after I'm finished editing. Don't let me forget. It's good stuff. For now, I'm finding errors since my editor asked me to change a couple of small plot points and they were woven throughout. I thought I had found them all on the second major edit but I didn't. Scary. I'm going underground Jack Bauer style until I've tackled my 400 pages. I can do this. That's what I keep telling myself. That said, it's a dream come true. I'm not complaining. It's an incredible whirlwind of a process and I'm thrilled to be in this position, bloodshot eyes and all.

Side note: Please mark Aug. 14, 3-6 p.m., on your calendar. That's the date for my online launch party on Facebook. It's going to be fun!. I'll give away tons of prizes/swag, gift cards and books. More about that later, too. I may have an in-person launch party later in the fall after my print books are available.
I also have a couple of other BIG announcements in the wings. So, stay tuned. A new website will be launched next week as well.
Whew! When is a writer supposed to sleep?! How do you like the editing process?
Saturday, July 19, 2014
Author Spotlight: Lisa Medley on Zombies
I want you to meet a good friend of mine and fellow Ozarks Romance Author, Lisa Medley. Lisa writes about zombies. Zombies! She is such a fun-loving person, married, with a beautiful daughter, Grace, who sent my very first fan letter. She's also hilarious and positive, yet she writes about zombies. Let's find out how this came about.
Welcome, Lisa. Tell us about your new release—the inspiration, genre, characters or anything you want us to know.
Q. How long have you been writing? What is your typical writing day like?
Q. Tell us something quirky about you that we may not know.
Interesting. You are legit--and, I'd add, courageous!
Q. What is your favorite marketing tip/promotional advice?
I agree. Some people overdo it. Way overdo it and I can't scroll past fast enough.
Q. What’s your next project?
What does a guy have to do around here to get some service? Deacon Walker marveled as he glared at the undulating queue of
grotesque reapers in front of him.
Now, tell us what you think about zombies in love?
Welcome, Lisa. Tell us about your new release—the inspiration, genre, characters or anything you want us to know.
Reap & Repent is the first of my urban fantasy series about
reapers. The grim kind. I started writing about reapers because the field
wasn’t quite as saturated with that particular monster. After a few visits to
local graveyards, the story began to fall together.
You visit graveyards? I guess that would be good inspiration for zombies!
Q. How long have you been writing? What is your typical writing day like?
I started writing fiction in 2010. I had written newspaper
articles and columns off and on through the years but never fiction. After
finding and falling in love with the paranormal romance genre, I read more than
a hundred books in the field and finally decided I could do that too. So I did.
My first attempt stunk. Vampires. Nothing new there. Then I stumbled onto the
idea for a series about reapers and I’ve already begun the fourth book in the
series. The first three will come out this year.
I don’t really have a typical day. I have a full-time day job, a
husband, a child, pets and farm animals. I stay up late after everyone has gone
to bed to peck out a few pages. I can usually write 1-2K in two or three hours
depending on how things are flowing.
I'm impressed that you get so much writing done with a full-time job and family. Not to mention your critters!
Q. How many books have you written or is this your debut?
Three books in the reaper series are completed. Reap & Repent
(#1) is out now at all online book retailers. Currently, they are all e-books
but Repent will publish in print on Harlequin.com sometime in December. Reap
& Redeem (#2) comes out Oct. 6 and Reap & Reveal (#3) will come out in
January. Currently I’m working on a ghost romance called Haunt My Heart
(unrelated to the reaper series) and will be finishing the first draft within
the month. Reap & Reckon (#4) insisted on starting without me so I do have
the first ten pages started on it as well.
Wow! You're making me look like a real slacker. I love your Harlequin story. Maybe you can discuss it more in the comment section. Also, I love how you incorporated "Reap" into your four titles. Great branding!
Q. Any suggestions on balancing writing and social media?
It’s hard to do both. I’m not going to lie. But without the
writing, you have no need to work on building your social media platform.
Definitely spend more time on the writing than on social media. The way social
media is changing so rapidly, I hate wasting too much effort there. Building
the relationships is the most important thing. So far, I can’t tell that I have
sold one book as a direct result of Twitter. I have sold books during and after
my online Facebook Launch Party, otherwise it’s all about talking to people and
making contacts with other authors and readers.
Direct promotion, organic or paid, has not yet proven fruitful in
my situation. Still, the more your name is out there and in front of people,
the more likely that they will eventually track you down.
Yes, name recognition and building relationships are both important. It does take time.
![]() |
Lisa was in a Zombie Parade in Lebanon, MO, recently. She really gets into her characters! |
I keep bees. Or more, I have a beehive in which bees live. They
occasionally produce honey for me, which I eat with joyful glee. I have a suit
and everything. I’m legit.
Interesting. You are legit--and, I'd add, courageous!
Be assertive but not aggressive. I skim over social media, buy me
tweets and shares 95% of the time. If I see something interesting about YOU
that catches my eye, I’ll drill down to see what you are all about. I’ve bought
books because of WHO people are not necessarily because of WHAT they were screaming.
I agree. Some people overdo it. Way overdo it and I can't scroll past fast enough.
Finishing Haunt My Heart is my first priority. I’m at 60k on it
and should wrap it up in another 5-10K. Then it’s back to my reapers. I have a
soft spot for monsters. And monsters in love? Well…mmmmm.
You're a nut. But a funny, likeable nut who is a good writer.
Q. I love first lines. Post your first sentence. Hook us.
Reap & Repent blurb
They see death. Can they share a life?
Ruth Scott can read the energy of every person
she meets. Then she meets Deacon Walker. She can see his ice-blue eyes, his
black hair, and his gorgeous face. But this beautiful stranger has no aura.
Deacon is just as unsettled by Ruth—and,
having spent more than two hundred years ushering souls to Purgatory, Deacon is
seldom shocked by anything. As he helps Ruth to understand her true nature, she
awakens desires that he decided long ago a Reaper can’t afford.
A demon invasion forces Deacon to confront the
darkness in his own past even as he fights to save the human souls he’s charged
to protect. When he’s taken captive, his first concern is for Ruth. But Ruth
just might be able to save herself—and the Reaper she can’t live without—if she
can learn to wield her newfound power.
BIO:
Lisa has always enjoyed reading about monsters in love and now she
writes about them. Reapers. The grim kind.
She adores beasties of all sorts, fictional as well as real, and has a
farm full of them in her Southwest Missouri home,
including: one child, one husband, two dogs, two cats, a dozen hens, thousands
of Italian bees, and a guinea pig.
She may or may not keep a complete zombie
apocalypse bug-out bag in her trunk at all times, including a machete. Just.
In. Case.
Connect with Lisa Medley here:
Tuesday, July 1, 2014
Romance Writers Weekly Blog Hop
It's Tuesday which means it's time for another installment of the Romance Writers Weekly blog hop! Each week, an author from the group poses three questions for several romance authors to answer. Follow us and you'll get insight into our writers' minds! Be sure to like our page on Facebook. https://www.facebook.com/RomanceWritersWeekly and stay tuned. There's going to be a HUGE give-away toward the end of this month!
This week's great questions come from author Tessa Gray. Thanks, Tessa. I enjoyed these.
1. Do any characters you've written into your books remind you of yourself? Explain which ones and why.
It's sometimes hard to keep bits of ourselves out of our writing. Sometimes we do it purposefully and other times, for me, it sneaks in. In my August debut, THURSDAYS AT COCONUTS, I have a character named Alexandra (Alex) who is quite a bit like me. For instance she has a "touch" of OCD (some days I have more than a "touch") and she loves T.J. Maxx (so do I). Alex also occasionally falls for the bad boys and likes men in uniforms, especially cops. Enough said.
2. Was there a teacher or mentor in your life who helped nurture your writing?
I had three--one in junior high, one in high school and one in college. Don Sharp was my English teacher at Pipkin Junior High. Mr. Sharp was entertaining, nurturing and pushed me to become a reporter for the school newspaper. Several of my articles were published and I was hooked.
In high school, Laura Fleetwood was my English and literature teacher. She had a lovely, easy, conversational way about her with an ability to draw the students in. I remember she had us put our desks in a circle which I thought was cool. Mrs. Fleetwood also had a section on mythology which I loved.
My college professor, Jo Van Arkel, was amazing. I told her once that she could make a rock creative. She gave us several observation exercises which were very helpful and she had us write and write some more. I always made "A's" and received encouraging comments on my papers. During one of my expository writing classes, she made a comment that I remember almost verbatim. "I'm not exaggerating to suggest that this article could be published in a major women's magazine." I've never forgotten that. I was in my mid-to-late twenties and a single mom. I just held onto her encouragement--and that essay--for years but never sent it in.
3. Every author has that moment when they doubt their ability to write. When that happens to you, how do you pull yourself up by the bootstraps and continue? What do you do to inspire YOURSELF?
I think this happens to every author. On many days we're filled with self-doubt. Isn't that why Hemingway drank?! What I usually do is either reread things I've written in the past to boost my confidence or I'll read a book. Reading others' work always gives me confidence and courage. It's not that I think I'm better than those authors, but I see exactly how they string sentences together to create a story and reading someone else's book always makes me ready to get back to my own storytelling.
Sunday, June 29, 2014
Meet Romantic Suspense Author Rachel Sharpe
I'm very pleased to introduce another Soul Mate Publishing Author. Meet Rachel Sharpe. She writes romantic suspense and her debut novel is entitled COLD AMBITION.
Welcome, Rachel!
"Cold Ambition" is the first book in the Jordan James, PI series, which is the story of a young woman from New Orleans living in Boston and trying to make it as a private investigator against some pretty serious odds. Her first case is a twenty-something-year old unsolved murder that not even Boston's finest could crack. Little did she know that with her very first case, Jordan would find herself unwittingly involved in an international conspiracy that puts her very life in jeopardy...
The inspiration for Jordan James came from the fact that as a child, I loved watching re-runs of "Magnum, PI" so much that I literally wanted to become a PI myself. The lifestyle presented in that show was possibly the most thrilling life I could have imagined - living in Hawaii on an ocean front estate free of charge and getting to drive a Ferrari you don't own while solving sensational cases with your friends? Who wouldn't want a life like that? When I truly began to put pen to paper, however, I couldn't imagine a more exciting city to begin a career as a PI than in Boston which, along with New Orleans, is one of my all-time favorite cities.
Perilously perched on the edge of a high-rise that offered a spectacular view of Faneuil Hall is most certainly not how I pictured my untimely demise...
Good one!!! I just love compelling first sentences. They're so important. Now, I wish I had asked you why you decided to write using first person. Maybe you can tell us in the comments.

Q. Tell us about your new release—the inspiration,
genre, characters or anything you want us to know.
"Cold Ambition" is the first book in the Jordan James, PI series, which is the story of a young woman from New Orleans living in Boston and trying to make it as a private investigator against some pretty serious odds. Her first case is a twenty-something-year old unsolved murder that not even Boston's finest could crack. Little did she know that with her very first case, Jordan would find herself unwittingly involved in an international conspiracy that puts her very life in jeopardy...
The inspiration for Jordan James came from the fact that as a child, I loved watching re-runs of "Magnum, PI" so much that I literally wanted to become a PI myself. The lifestyle presented in that show was possibly the most thrilling life I could have imagined - living in Hawaii on an ocean front estate free of charge and getting to drive a Ferrari you don't own while solving sensational cases with your friends? Who wouldn't want a life like that? When I truly began to put pen to paper, however, I couldn't imagine a more exciting city to begin a career as a PI than in Boston which, along with New Orleans, is one of my all-time favorite cities.
Now that you put it that way, I think I'd like to be a PI as well! That was a good show. I agree Boston and New Orleans are both great cities and wonderful fodder for novels.
Q. How long have you been writing and what is your typical writing day like?
I've been writing stories ever since I could write.
Reading and writing have always been passions of mine, which is most likely why
I became an English major in college. A typical writing day for me is atypical
at best. At this point in my career, I still have a "day job," so I write
whenever I can. Oftentimes, I get the most writing done on the go via my cell
phone's writing app. If I'm writing a novel, my goal is to complete the first
draft within a season. Editing takes more time, but as long as I get that first
draft down, I'm good.
I've heard you talk about that phone app before. What is it called? Though, I can't imagine penning a novel (even part of one) on my phone. I love that idea to finish a draft in a season. Hmm. Maybe I'll try that.
This is my debut novel, but there are currently four
books in the Jordan James, PI series. Soul Mate Publishing contracted book two,
"Lost Distinction," and I am editing book three, working title "Retribution." I
am also writing book four. I hope for this to be a continuous series like "Jack
Reacher."
You are making me feel like a real slacker especially since I can no longer say my day job is anything but writing. But I did work outside the home for over 25 years. Congrats on selling book #2 and working on #'s 3 and 4. I'm impressed.
Q. Any suggestions on balancing writing and social
media?
It's all about consistency. You have to remain active to
keep your name and your work out there, but you don't want to over-saturate your
market to the point you lose readers' interest. I try to keep semi-active on
Facebook and Twitter as well as my blog, but I do not post daily. Marketing is
easily a full-time job that could take away from your writing time if you let
it. That's why it's important to be consistent, but keep things in
balance.
Marketing can definitely be a full-time job. Achieving balance is key, I agree, but it's often hard to follow that advice.
Q. Tell us something quirky about you that we may not
know.
It's not exactly quirky, but I love music and I play the
guitar. I was in a band in high school called Outta the Blue. If I couldn't
write novels, I would probably focus more time on my music.
You're cool! Love the name of the band and the fact that you can play a guitar!
Q. What is your favorite marketing tip/promotional
advice?
When I first began my journey to publication, I was
talking to a friend and fellow author and he said, "You're going to write? Then
you need to Tweet." After a minimal argument, I agreed that whenever that
wonderful day happened, the day when a publisher finally said, "Yes, we want to
publish you," on that day I would give in and get Twitter. And I did. And my
friend was right. Twitter allows you to reach, in my opinion, a wider audience
than Facebook. Both are amazing marketing tools that anyone needing to promote
themselves or their product/service should utilize, but so far, I've found it
easier to engage readers on Twitter.
Interesting. I've found more fans and networking opportunities on Facebook! But I'm also on Twitter.
Q. What’s your next project?
"Lost Distinction," book two in the Jordan James, PI
series. In it, Jordan is called upon to find the missing son of a US Ambassador.
With time running out and lives at stake, she must race to uncover the culprit
of an elaborate plot while also uncovering a far more personal truth too
intimate to ignore...
Sounds intriguing and complex.
Q. I love first lines. Post your first sentence. Hook
us!
Perilously perched on the edge of a high-rise that offered a spectacular view of Faneuil Hall is most certainly not how I pictured my untimely demise...
Good one!!! I just love compelling first sentences. They're so important. Now, I wish I had asked you why you decided to write using first person. Maybe you can tell us in the comments.
Everyone, please read Rachel's excerpt below, then leave a comment and follow her on Facebook and Twitter. And, of course, check out her novel, COLD AMBITION. Thanks for stopping by, Rachel.
COLD AMBITION Excerpt
My name is Jordan James, and I am a twenty-four- year-old woman. I
just wanted to get that straight from the beginning. I am well aware that Jordan
is commonly a boy’s name, but for some reason my parents decided that a normal
name like Melissa or Amanda would not suit me. Regardless, my name has not
caused me any trouble since an unfortunate teasing incident in the third grade.
In fact, it has been quite useful in my line of work. But again, I
digress.
I’m
originally from a suburb of New Orleans but moved to the Northeast to attend
Brown University. I spent four fabulous years in Providence and graduated magna
cum laude with a B.S. in psychology. Like most bright- eyed, eager graduates, I
assumed jobs would be thrown at me as soon as I was handed my diploma. I assumed
that I could take my pick. The world was my oyster. To make a long story short,
my ideas and reality did not match. After several frustrating months of
searching, I decided to move to Boston. I thought this city would provide me
with all of the wonderful opportunities I had been unable to find in Providence.
When it didn’t, I settled and took a job as a waitress at a small Italian
restaurant along the Freedom Trail near the Old North Church to make ends meet.
It wasn’t a bad job; the tips were good, and the owners were wonderful. In fact,
they became quasi-parents to me when I didn’t know anyone else in Boston, but I
wasn’t satisfied. This job wasn’t what I had spent four grueling years studying
for.
After
work each evening, I went home to my one- bedroom apartment on Sewall Avenue,
counted my tips, and then spent many hours searching online for different career
opportunities that might be available to someone with my credentials.
Unfortunately, I had already looked into most of them and during an economic
crisis, good jobs can be hard to attain. I started saving religiously and
continued the search for my dream job.
After
I saved up a decent amount of money and recruited the reluctant help of my
parents, I decided to go into business for myself. What career did I decide on?
What job could possibly stimulate me intellectually and help me provide for
myself in a manner that I could finally be on my own, both physically and
fiscally? Private investigation. Yes, I decided to set up shop as a P.I. Now,
one might wonder, what could have possibly led me to believe that I could make
it as a P.I.? Another valid question is: why did I want to become one in the
first place? The answer to both questions can be summed up in one word: Magnum.
I grew up watching re-runs of the classic 1980’s show and was enthralled by both
his career and his lifestyle. It was exciting and thrilling. He lived in Hawaii,
drove a Ferrari that he didn’t own, and lived on an expansive oceanfront estate
free of charge. Who wouldn’t want a life like that? With the black belt in Tae
Kwon Do that I had earned in college, I felt more than prepared to take on a
potentially dangerous job. However, even with my black belt and my education, my
choice of career received less than enthusiastic responses.
“No
one is going to hire a woman to investigate anything,” my father stated when I
called him with the news.
“Oh,
that is such a dangerous job. You could be killed! What’s wrong with the
restaurant? In fact, what’s wrong with moving back home?” my mother inquired. I
must admit I shuddered at the thought.
“A
private eye? Good luck with that one,” scoffed my older sister, Alicia, the
pediatric neurosurgeon. She had graduated from an in-state university and set up
her practice within thirty miles of my parents’ residence. She was always the
good one.
Despite
the negative feedback, I decided to forge my new life in the home of our
country’s forefathers, where liberty was conceived and it was decided that
freedom was considered worth dying for. Unfortunately, the cost of living had
gone up substantially since Paul Revere had galloped into history with his
famous midnight ride. Finding a reasonable apartment in an area that didn’t have
the police on speed dial was difficult. Finding an office that didn’t put my
unborn children into debt would be a miracle.
I
learned, however, that perseverance pays off. My landlord owned an office
building near Fenway Park with a tiny, unrentable office. It was smaller than
all of the other offices in the building and, therefore, considered undesirable.
I investigated this situation and found out that my landlord had been unable to
rent it for over a year and a half. This was the perfect opportunity for me to
put that minor in communications to work. Although it took nearly a month, I was
able to logically convince Mr. Chambers that if he were to rent the office to me
at five-eighths the normal price for six months, it would be beneficial to us
both. Eventually, he saw it my way. He says it was actually because I nearly
drove him to jump into the Charles River because of my incessant nagging. I like
to believe it was due to my keen negotiating skills.
So, on November 3,
nearly a year and a half after graduating, I unlocked the door to my office,
turned on the light, and smiled at the black letters freshly inked to the opaque
glass in my door—Jordan James, P.I. Now all that I needed were clients. As fate
would have it, someone was looking for a P.I., someone whose case would affect
not only my career but my very existence.
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