Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Interview. Show all posts

16 Jul 2014

Interview with the lovely Cate Masters

Thanks so much for having me at Fiction Dreams, Suzy! I love your blog header – so cute! :)
It's my pleasure, Cate! It's great to have you here :)

Do dreams ever inspire your writing? What did you last dream about?

I wish! I’ve never dreamed a story like some writers do. However, I spend a good part of the day daydreaming. :)
I do dream almost every night, but usually wake up with only a vague recollection of the actual dream. When I was young, I kept a dream diary and still vividly recall some of those – riding on white horses with The Beatles (yes, I was a Beatlemaniac), a very cool castle under the ocean.
Last night’s dream, I remember because it was kind of awful. I was forced to return to a job I hated, one that stole all my energy and time and focus. I was miserable when I worked there because I had zero time to write.

When did you first start writing? And when were you first published?
Long, long ago in a galaxy far away.... lol. A solitary childhood brought out the writer in me at age 11, mainly poems back then. I was on the school newspaper staffs, and loved essays. In my 20s, I turned to fiction, though I didn’t seriously pursue publication for another decade, at least. Aside from a few short stories published in literary magazines and ezines, my first stories were with online publishers in 2009.

What is it about 'chick lit' that appeals to you the most? Do you read other genres? 
I love the humor of chick lit, but love that it’s also so realistic. The heroines are women I’d love to befriend!
I read any genre, really, if the book blurb catches my interest. I’m not a fan of labels, actually.

Can you tell us a little about your latest book?


Love to! Goddess, Awakened is the first in The Goddess Connection series, in which every heroine learns she’s related to a goddess. For this book, the goddess is Iris, a somewhat obscure goddess but she seemed perfect when I learned she was the Goddess of the Rainbow, the bridge between mortals and the realm beyond.
The heroine’s a little different too – she’s in her forties, widowed, and in starting her life over, she purchases a rundown bed and breakfast, in hopes customers will love the dishes she makes with the lavender she grows. Little does she know it sits atop a ley line, and those in The Underworld want to gain control of its power.
Here’s the blurb:
With a little help from a goddess, battling evil is a piece of cake for Jocelyn Gibson.
A descendant of the goddess Iris, Jocelyn Gibson may have forgotten about the realm of magic, but it hasn’t forgotten her. When Eric Hendricks is targeted by a demon, Joss must step in to battle the evil and save the town’s awkward, but endearing, vet…who also happens to be the man she loves.
Joss’s new inn, a culinary career specializing in cooking with lavender and a new love all make for a fine recipe of disaster. She needs to embrace her inner goddess and harness the powers she never knew she had before it’s too late.
Available from:
Amazon | Barnes & Noble | All Romance eBooks | Kensington

What inspired you to write it?
The Goddess Connection series tag line is: Every woman should embrace her inner goddess. I’m very passionate about this idea! Too many women are so busy taking care of everyone else in their lives, they don’t nurture themselves enough.
Although every book in this series will be a stand-alone, another common thread is that each heroine’s lifelong quirks will become her strengths. Another idea I love – that being different is wonderful, and everyone should develop their talents and follow their bliss.
Lastly, I’m a huge fan of mythology, so had great fun researching and writing these stories. I have the draft of another finished, and am more than halfway done with the third.

Have you ever spotted anyone reading your books anywhere?

Not yet. Someday I hope to! :)

Who designs your covers?
The publishers assign cover artists, but do ask for suggestions so writers can have some input. For the ones I self-pubbed, I designed those covers. I love working with graphics – designing ads and book videos are a good creative outlet for me too.

If your latest book was made into a film, who would you cast?
I’d always imagined Diane Lane as Joss. Judi Dench would be fabulous as Gram, and Susan Sullivan would be perfect as Joss’s aunt. Oo, Jamie Foxx as Lord Plouton (aka Satan) would be amazing! For Sheree, the waitress-turned-demon, I’d love Helena Bonham-Carter, please. :)
I had an entire cast already assembled, lol.

What's your favourite Chick Lit book that made it to the big screen?
Hm, the one that springs to mind is Bridget Jones, though I’m sure I’ve seen others!

What were the last two books you read?
Dirty Magic by Jaye Wells, an action-packed paranormal set in a unique world, and Alice Hoffman’s The Museum of Extraordinary Things – love, love love her magical realism.

Name one female author who you think deserves to be better known.
Gosh, there are so many! Honestly, so many wonderful writers are published by electronic presses who deserve widespread recognition. Maria Zannini, for example – a fantastic author. Everyone should check her out.

Where do you write?
Mostly in my office, though I sometimes cart my laptop outside. I’ve also been known to scribble in notebooks in the car.

Tell us a random fact about yourself.

I am the seventh child of two parents who each had seven in their families. Probably not such a random fact for my mom and dad! (I opted for less than seven children, btw)

Who would play you in the movie about your life?
photo credit: nick step via photopin cc
According to the Buzzfeed quiz I took awhile back, Tina Fey. I agree, I think she’d be great!

Tell us an interesting fact about where you live.
My town doesn’t appear on most maps. It’s rather remote, and our house is set among the apple orchards. Absolutely gorgeous during any season.

What are your (writing) plans for the future?
To keep writing! And hopefully pleasing readers, enough so my books make it onto the bestseller lists!

Tell us one thing that's on your bucket list.
I’ve long wanted to travel around the world, and there are several writing workshops that would combine those two loves! One is Francis Ford Coppolla’s workshop in Belize, and another is in Italy.

Favourite myth / fairytale?

Oh, tough question. I’ve always been a huge Grimm fan (and now love the TV series), and mythology’s fraught with drama and treachery and romance. Hard to pick just one, seriously. The next subject for The Goddess Connection will be Persephone, though – she intrigues me. I also loved the idea of constellations portraying mythological figures, and wove that into a literary family saga called Orion Rising, under my other pen name: http://paintingfirewithwords.blogspot.com/p/orion-rising.html

Who (or what) did you want to be when you were a kid?
Originally, I wanted to be a journalist, or possibly a photojournalist. That changed when I fell in love with fiction.

Thanks again for having me today, Suzy! It was a real pleasure.
You're welcome here any time Cate! :)

Cate Masters has made beautiful central Pennsylvania her home, but she’ll always be a Jersey girl at heart. When not spending time with her dear hubby, she can be found in her lair, concocting a magical brew of contemporary, historical, and fantasy/paranormal stories with her cat Chairman Maiow and dog Lily as company. Look for her at http://catemasters.blogspot.com and in strange nooks and far-flung corners of the web.
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Twitter: @CateMasters

Book video

19 Jan 2014

Interview: Multiple genre author Marilyn Brant

Meet the fabulous Marilyn Brant...
Do dreams inspire your writing? What did you last dream about?
Daydreams tend to inspire my writing more than dreams at night...especially since I so rarely remember those night-time dreams and, when I do, they're usually scary! But I find myself daydreaming a lot, especially when I exercise at the gym. My mind starts wandering the moment I step onto that elliptical machine, and I begin to imagine these interesting scenarios between characters -- frequently romantic scenes punctuated by some fast-paced action. That also probably comes from watching so many episodes of "Castle," "NCIS: Los Angeles," "Nikita," "Supernatural" and "Sleepy Hollow" while trying to work out...LOL.

When did you first start writing? And when were you first published?
I always wrote poetry and essays, but I started writing fiction seriously in my early 30s. It took me nearly 6 years of writing manuscripts and submitting them before I signed with a literary agent and almost 2 more years before my debut novel sold to a New York publisher. According to Jane (a steamy, new adult, light paranormal about a woman who has the ghost of Jane Austen in her head, giving her dating advice) was my first published book, although it was actually the 5th manuscript I'd written. So, it was definitely NOT a quick process! However, three of the romantic comedies I'd written before "Jane" were later published individually and in a boxed set. As The Sweet Temptations Collection, they hit the USA Today Bestseller List this past fall, so it was exciting to finally see those stories reach readers, too.

How would you classify your books? (what genres?)
I write in multiple genres. According to Jane is new adult/light paranormal/chick lit, Friday Mornings at Nine is more serious women's fiction, and A Summer in Europe is romantic women's fiction/travel adventure. I've written several romantic comedies -- some steamy, some sweeter -- like On Any Given Sundae. And my latest book, The Road to You, is a new adult/older YA coming-of-age mystery!! Clearly, I enjoy mixing genres ;).

What is it about these genre that appeals to you the most? Do you read other genres? If so, which?
I read almost everything. I love romances of all kinds as well as mysteries, historical fiction, contemporaries, paranormal stories, both comedy and drama, women's fiction, young adult, new adult and the literary classics. The only genres I need to watch out for when reading are horror or gory thrillers. Very graphic violent descriptions will sometimes give me nightmares if I'm not careful!

What's the title of your latest book? Can you tell us about it?

THE ROAD TO YOU is my latest novel. It's a story about finding truth...and love...along the highway of life. Genre-wise, it's a road trip, a mystery and a coming-of-age tale rolled into one! Here's the official blurb:
"Until I found Gideon’s journal in the tool shed—locked in the cedar box where I’d once hidden my old diary—I’d been led to believe my brother was dead. But the contents of his journal changed all that."
The Road to Discovery...
Two years ago, Aurora Gray’s world turned upside down when her big brother Gideon and his best friend Jeremy disappeared. Now, during the summer of her 18th birthday, she unexpectedly finds her brother’s journal and sees that it’s been written in again. Recently. By him.
The Road to Danger...
There are secret messages coded within the journal’s pages. Aurora, who’s unusually perceptive and a natural puzzle solver, is hell bent on following where they lead, no matter what the cost. She confides in the only person she feels can help her interpret the clues: Donovan McCafferty, Jeremy’s older brother and a guy she’s always been drawn to—even against her better judgment.
The Road to You...
Reluctantly, Donovan agrees to go with her and, together, they set out on a road trip of discovery and danger, hoping to find their lost brothers and the answers to questions they’ve never dared to ask aloud.
"In that expectant space between silence and melody, our trip began..."

What inspired you to write it?
I'm intrigued by Route 66, and I love road trips/travel adventures. One of my favorite things about the TV show "Supernatural" is the way the Winchester brothers get to know each other and deal with their discoveries and a multitude of dangers on their road trips. I remember hearing that the show was pitched something like: "Urban horror legends meet Route 66 (the classic TV show)." In the case of The Road to You, it's more like "Nancy Drew in love meets Route 66." I read a LOT of Nancy Drew mysteries as a kid, and almost as many Gothic romances! So these were a couple of my inspirations. Plus, I had the opportunity to take an actual Route 66 road trip with my family during the summer, and I got to see many of the sites in the story firsthand. (I have pictures of them on my website here: http://marilynbrant.com/MBbooksROADTRIP66.html )

Is it part of a series?
No. Technically, The Road to You is a standalone story. But I set the novel in the late 1970s for a number of reasons, one of them being that I liked to imagine my main character, Aurora, in the present day, too...knowing how she might react to the world differently for having had the experiences she did when she was 17. So I have, in fact, written an expanded version of the novel that includes separate chapters with a parallel story about Aurora's life right now -- a story that takes place in 2014, when she's a 54-year-old mom with adult sons. That's something I may publish later this year for readers who might enjoy reading about both the older and younger Aurora simultaneously.

Have you ever spotted anyone reading your books anywhere?
Not yet! I'm hoping that'll happen one day...

Who designs your covers?

I've been fortunate to have had five excellent cover designers: Kristine Mills-Noble at Kensington Books, Rebecca Young at Keahirada Designs, Kim Killion at The Killion Group, Emily Tippetts at E.M. Tippetts Book Designs, and Sarah Hansen at Okay Creations. All of them have crafted lovely covers for my various novels.

If your latest book was made into a film, who would you cast?
I'd imagined Ian Somerhalder (of "The Vampire Diaries") as Donovan and Willa Holland (of "Arrow") as Aurora. Would love to see them take on those roles!

What's your favourite Chick Lit book that made it to the big screen?
It would have to be Bridget Jones's Diary. The Jane Austen connection drew me in and made me read Helen Fielding's book in the first place, and the fun performances (especially by Colin Firth) made the film a delight.

What were the last two books you read?
I just finished WIFE 22 by Melanie Gideon and, before that, Violet Duke's RESISTING THE BAD BOY. Really loved them both!

Name one female author who you think deserves to be better known.
Edie Ramer -- I've enjoyed so many of her books, and her novel CHRISTMAS AT ANGEL LAKE was such a wonderful, heartwarming romance -- I loved it!

Where do you write?
Depending on the type of work I'm doing, I write in different places around our house. When I'm plotting and organizing scenes, I spread all of the pages out on the floor on the living room and try to make sense of them. When I'm drafting, I sit on our bed and write in longhand. Then, I go to my office to type and clean up the draft, printing out the pages of each completed chapter. When I have most of the book written/typed, I take the printed pages with me to the sofa downstairs and edit there. I'll also send the completed draft to my Kindle and read through the manuscript that way, so I can see it in another format. The whole writing thing can be a fairly involved process, but it's the best job in the world for me :).

When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?
It was kind of a toss up between a detective, a scientist and a musician, LOL. Every once in a while, I still play the piano or the guitar, but my first instrument was actually the viola. I sucked at it and do NOT play that one anymore!!

In the movie of your life, who would play you?
Ha! I have no idea which actress would be nutty enough to do that!!

Speed Round...
Top drink to make you tipsy?
Long Island Iced Tea
Shopaholic or shopadon't? Shopadon't!!
Sky high heels or closer to the ground? Definitely closer to the ground
E.L. James or Jilly Cooper? Neither -- for books with steam, I pick up a Lexi Ryan novel
Cry baby or tough cookie? Tough cookie
Exotic beach or enchanted forest? Exotic beach

Marilyn Brant is a USA TODAY bestselling and award-winning author of contemporary fiction, and she was named the 2013 Illinois Author of the Year by the Illinois Association of Teachers of English. With Kensington Books, she wrote ACCORDING TO JANE, the story of a modern woman who receives dating advice from the spirit of Jane Austen (October 2009); FRIDAY MORNINGS AT NINE, a tale about three suburban moms, their marriages and what happens a decade or two after the "Happily Ever After" (a Doubleday Book Club and Book-of-the-Month Club pick in 2010); and A SUMMER IN EUROPE, a novel about a woman's journey of self discovery as she travels through Europe with her adventurous aunt's Sudoku & Mahjongg Club (a Literary Guild and BOMC2 featured alternate in 2011, and a Rhapsody Book Club Top 20 Bestseller in "Fiction & Literature" in 2012). She's also a #1 Kindle & #1 Nook Bestseller and has written a series of fun and flirty contemporary romantic comedies, available as original ebooks. Her newest novel, THE ROAD TO YOU, is a coming-of-age romantic mystery and was released in October 2013. And she's also part of a romantic new-adult contemporary anthology called ALL I EVER WANTED with authors Caisey Quinn, Lexi Ryan and Rhonda Helms (January 2014).
Website
Blog
Amazon page for THE ROAD TO YOU
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20 Oct 2013

A warm welcome to Nicola Moriarty

It's great to have another friendly face with me today and it's the gorgeous Sydney-based author Nicola Moriarty. Welcome to Fiction Dreams, Nicola!
When did you first start reading Chick Lit?
I choose my books the same way I choose my wine - based on the picture on the front! Ha, no, I'm kidding... sort of. But I do get caught up by appealing covers, and I'd say that's probably what led me to first start reading chick-lit: bright, beautiful covers that enticed me with their promise of escape. As for when this happened though? Your guess is as good as mine, many, many years ago I suppose!

When did you first start writing Chick Lit?
My first novel (Free-Falling) was released just last year (2012), and I started working on it a couple of years before that. Officially it's categorised as 'women's commercial fiction' - but it definitely has characteristics of the chick lit genre.

What is it about this genre that appeals to you the most? Do you read other genres? If so, which?
Escapism! I like feel-good books, books that sweep me into their world and leave me feeling content. I read all sorts of other genres as well though, crime, thriller, fantasy, YA, etc, etc, etc!

Name one of your favourite Chick Lit books?
Bittersweet by Melanie La'Brooy, she's one of my favourite authors!

What's the title of your latest book? Can you tell us about it?
My most recent full-length release is called Paper Chains. It's about two Australia women who meet in London and become friends. They're both hiding secrets about their past and they're both determined to find out the truth about one another. It's a story of friendship, love, depression and tragedy - but it does still have heart-warming moments!
I also have a supernatural romance novella that was released in July of this year called Captivation. It's about a woman who withdraws from the world after losing her husband, but just as she's ready to move on, she starts to sense that he may have returned to her after all. The problem however, is that their passion for one another might just turn into something more sinister...

What inspired you to write it?

Paper Chains was inspired by my own experience with depression and my desire to explore the path my life could have taken if things had been different. I wrote Captivation as it was a chance to try something very different from my normal style.

Is it part of a series?
Nope, I haven't considered writing any books part of a series as yet.

Who designs your covers?
It's arranged by the publishers, so I'm afraid I don't know!

If your latest book was made into a film, who would you cast?
In Paper Chains, I'd love to see Mila Kunis as India and Amy Adams as Hannah. And maybe Justin Long as Liam and Ryan Gosling as Simon!

What's your favourite Chick Lit book that made it to the big screen?
Either In Her Shoes (based on the book by Jennifer Weiner) or One for the Money (based on Janet Evanovich's Stephanie Plum series).

Who is your all time favourite Chick Lit character?
Helen Walsh from The Mystery of Mercy Close by Marian Keyes. She's wonderful. As is Marian herself of course!

Name one female author who you think deserves to be better known.
Lisa Heidke. I love her writing and it's time she was known internationally!

Where do you write?
My husband and I run a graphic design agency together (butterstream.com.au) - I'm in the office with him three days a week (when our girls are at preschool) and I use this time to either help out with the business, study (I'm just about to finish up a uni degree with a writing major) or... write!

In the movie of your life, who would play you?
Photo credit: [ebarrera] via photopin cc
Zooey Deschanel!

Speed Round...
Top drink to make you tipsy? Champagne - especially if it is consumed quite quickly :)
Shopaholic or shopadon't? Shopadon't - I hate trying clothes on!
Sky high heels or closer to the ground? Close to the ground, although surprisingly I happen to be wearing heels right now as we speak!
E.L. James or Jilly Cooper? Jilly Cooper.
Cry baby or tough cookie? Cry baby - I don't mean to be though!

Nicola Moriarty lives in Sydney's north west with her husband and two small (but remarkably strong willed) daughters. She is the younger sister of bestselling authors Liane Moriarty and Jaclyn Moriarty. In between various career changes, becoming a mum and studying at Macquarie University, she began to write. Now, she can't seem to stop. She has published two novels, Free-Faling and Paper Chains, as well as a novella titled Captivation with Random House Australia and has contributed to the Sunlounger anthology.
Website
Blog
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21 Sept 2013

A special interview with Poppet

Now, if you've never heard of Poppet, then you're seriously missing out. This is one author to watch. But beware when you open any one of her books... because you're in for a real fright...


When did you first start writing? And when were you first published? How many books have you written?
That's three questions (lol). When did I first start writing: This is a very literal question because to answer it honestly I would have to tell you how old I was when I learned to write. The answer is 4 years old. I started writing when I was 4 (pmsl). When was I first published: Again this isn't specified as to 'what' was published. For my writing I was first published nationally in 2006, internationally in 2008. As an author of fiction novels: 2010. How many books have I written: Somewhere around 48/49 (and that is published novels, not the endless collection of files I have on my computer).

Your books tend to be very dark. Why is that?
My books are dark, I have to agree. Why? Because my life has been dark.


What is it about the horror and paranormal that appeals to you the most? Do you read other genres? If so, which?
I read every genre. As a reader I tend to favour non-fiction (fiction has the ability to disappoint. Non-fiction doesn't.) As a child I needed to cling to horror novels and movies to escape my life. I needed to read about someone having it worse than me. It fostered a love of the horror genre very young (as young as 8). One thing about old horrors is they have an elegant romanticism to them. This is a trait that modern movies have lost, and I think that is why I like to write romance-horror. It pays homage to a bygone era when even the villains were dashing, cunning, and deceptively manipulative. As for paranormal, what I like about it is it doesn't box the imagination. Inside that genre your imagination can conjure any ability, any trait, any feature, and in this genre the scope of the imagination not only flies, but it shows our potential if we allow ourselves to create 'anything' (anything at all).

What's the title of your latest book? Can you tell us about it?
My latest novel is Over Exposure. It follows the story which began in my psychological horror Darkroom. In Darkroom a man who believes he is the angel of vengeance kidnaps and stalks Shauna, subjecting her to horrific mental and physical abuse. He infiltrates every aspect of her life, what she doesn't know is the man she loves and ends up living with is the very same monster who destroyed her life.
This series points out the psychosis of the extremely devout, the madness and cruelty embodied by bible bashers who think because they can quote scripture they are saints, flawless, living extensions of God's divine will.
History and mankind has shown how corrupt this kind of power can be, and just what kind of lengths a madman will go to in order to 'deliver you from evil'. The problem with evil is the definition is 'subjective' to the person holding the bible. It's flawed, it's hypocritical, and it's downright dangerous. What if you met the god of the old testament today? Do you know him? Do you even like him? He sent plagues, fire, poisonous snakes, and hardship, down on his followers. He made Ezekiel eat bread baked on excrement. He threatened to cut open pregnant women (because he was angry), he sanctioned cannibalism (most people don't know that), and he took the firstborn child of every one of his people. To get your own baby back you had to buy it back after one month. (Can you imagine taking a new-born baby away from its mother for the first month of life? What cruelty!) - these scriptures are quoted in the novel.
You see the original horror story is the Bible. If you read it all it's enough to stress you out and give you night sweats. To me it is in no way blasphemous to use the bible as a very literal inspiration to write horror.
In Over Exposure, Shauna is abducted from a hospital ward by her brother-in-law. Her husband Victor is assumed dead, and the bible (in Deuteronomy) states that it is her brother-in-law's duty to take her as his wife. Shauna wakes up in a compound in Utah, stuck in 'storage', in the dark, and is forced into a position of humbleness and subjugation by 'god'.
Victor's father has such a god-complex that he truly believes he is God. As such her body is not her own, it belongs to God. The blood covenant is theirs. Her body, her life, her babies, all belong to God now. When she goes against his laws, finding the entire situation repugnant, she is given old testament discipline, but God refuses to give her reprieve as he has an axe to grind against all women. Eve and Lilith being the first two, and now it's Shauna's turn.
Throughout the novel scripture is quoted (and cited), showing just how this evil empire is founded in scripture. It is a diabolical situation, one where you are rooting for Shauna to escape, to get away from her captors, and one that will make you pray you never ever meet this 'god'.

What inspired you to write it? 
I apologise now, but I'm giving you the long answer.
What inspired me to write it: My own trauma at the hands of crazy bible bashers.
It started young, which is why I know God has no mercy for the innocent or for children. God doesn't answer prayers, and after spending half my life doing research on the scriptures used to destroy my childhood, it was indeed a wonderful day when I read Acts and Amos (one is new testament and one is old): Both passages (quoted in Over Exposure) explain that the god of the Old Testament wasn't a good guy, he's a false god, an angel, who is also called Moloch (the god of fire and sacrifice).
If you took off the rose tinted glasses and just read the bible as if it is a history book, what you read is a very different story to the one you're 'sold' by the salesman who goes door to door trying to save your soul. If we read it not as a religious tome, but rather an educational one, the book you will read will be the most entertaining collection of madness ever compiled as one anthology. I love to quote anomalies from it in the Darkroom Saga series. In Over Exposure you will discover the passages referencing vampires and zombies, helicopters and necromancy. In the previous novel to Over Exposure (titled Satanarium), you will read about biblical sanctioned abortion, cannibalism, organised and sanctioned rape, human trafficking, and how wearing your hair long (as a man) is a sign of dedication to God. (Satanariium is a sanitarium where you are freed of your satans by Preacher John.)
The reason why I needed to write this series is to call out the hypocrisy. This is not a loving and kind 'religion'. Jesus was named Immanuel by his mother. He was prophesied as such in Isaiah. So his name is not Jesus, nor is it Christ. It's these anomalies that irk me endlessly. Saying jesus christ is not blasphemy because neither of these were his names (and I use both in my novels as it's not using anyone's name in vain). This is a theme I visit again and again in my books.
Theology is very close to my heart and I have spent most of my life researching this subject. But how wonderful it is to write fiction for people just like me. People who've had their childhoods robbed from them, their innocence shattered, because of a book. Who know what it means to live 'in fear of God' because his devils run rampant inside the walls of your own home. They look human, but their bloodlust and lack of mercy hammers home that 'Jesus loves you' with lots and lots of pain. Since starting this series and then writing the Gods and Thurs series, the sheer amount of readers who have contacted me, asking for my research, needing to get their hands on more information, wanting to be free from this religious tyranny, people who have been hurt just like me, it's the greatest reward for me as an author. By writing religious horror fiction (and paranormal-religious romance) I have touched hearts, I'm reaching the hurt people, and I'm helping them heal. Someone else recognises their anguish, their torment, someone else knows that the little black book is a handbook of horrors piled upon horrors. There is nothing more terrifying than a god who thinks your life is expendable for his ego.
The next novels in the series are also based on real life inspiration. Wrapture is an erotic-horror, taking the bible into the bedroom and showing the new trend in religious fetish. But I'm betting after reading the next novel a lot more women will be willing to go to church (lol).

Is it part of a series?
Yes. Sorry I rambled on in the last question and answered this one there. The series is The Darkroom Saga. The novels in this series are #1 Darkroom (currently free on Smashwords and Barnes & Noble), #2 Satanarium #3 Over Exposure #4 Wrapture, #5 SinnerGog. Book 4 is due out end of autumn and book 5 is due out in April 2014. They are all published by my darling and courageous publisher: Wild Wolf Publishing.

Two of my favourite books of yours are in the YA genre. Do you have any plans to write more?
Yes, I do have plans. I'm writing one on the quiet at the moment, and I have another one due out in 2014.
YAY!

Have you ever spotted anyone reading your books anywhere?
No, never. I get told about it though ;)

Who designs your covers?

I do. I love to create covers, that is my zen time.

If your latest book was made into a film, who would you cast?
Gosh, I have no clue. I'm not up to date on the A-list and am not a follower of celebs.

What's your favourite book that made it to the big screen?
Bridget Jones' Diary.

What were the last two books you read?
Tigress, by J.E. Taylor and: Temptation by Troy Lambert

Name one female author who you think deserves to be better known.
I can name a few. Nya Rawlins (for her paranormal novels), Elaina Davidson (for her fantasy novels – the Lore of Arcana series is epic and brilliant); J.E.Taylor for her crime novels, Jessica Degarmo (for her romance novels), Lindy Dale (she writes the funniest / happiest romances), and my fave YA author is you, especially the Ghost of Josiah Grimshaw.
Aww thanks Poppet :D

Where do you write?
At my desk in the corner of the gym.

When you were a kid, what did you want to be when you grew up?
A marine biologist

In the movie of your life, who would play you?
That is a very good question and one I can't answer as I have no clue.

Speed Round...
Top drink to make you tipsy?
Mojito
Shopaholic or shopadon't? Shopadon't
Sky high heels or closer to the ground? Always wear shoes you can run in and fight in
E.L. James or Jilly Cooper? No thanks (lol)
Cry baby or tough cookie? Both. I'm very confrontational so I have tough cookie default settings, but when I'm REALLY angry I just cry.

Poppet writes horror and edgy paranormal romance, and is currently published with Wild Wolf Publishing, Vamptasy Publishing, Eibonvale Press.
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Over Exposure on Amazon US
Over Exposure on Amazon UK

Excerpt:
Ditching the wheels ten metres from the access tunnel to the ossuary, I take the route I know, the path of least resistance.
Running low, keeping to the darkest puddles of shadow, I bolt into the tunnel, activating night vision as I speed deeper into the mountain.
“What's happening?” whispers in my ear.
“Penetration successful. Moving west. So far so good,” I mumble, needing my focus to remain uninterrupted.
Entering the huge cave lined from floor to ceiling with skeletal bones, the stark layout chills my new conscience. What kind of 'church' reveres the bones of the dead? How can this practice be accepted around the world without them seeing it for what it is. This is the way evil worship, their god is not the god of the living, but the overlord of the underworld.
Slinking silently between the altar and the revered symbol of death, the crucifix, I edge to the interior channel that will take me into the heart of this hellhole.
Aiming my rifle, it's all clear as I sweep left and right.
I have no time for reflection, heading straight for the power grid. Reaching the boards I flip switches, unclipping the blowtorch from my belt, igniting it with a swift click from the Zippo, melting the switches into the off position, looking away because its blinding with night vision activated.
The heat could start a fire, but I don't rightly give a shit.
I have three mace cans filled with liquid nitrogen to spray into the faces of anyone who gets close enough to intercept me.
With the compound plunged into silence and darkness I head for the emergency stairwell, running stealthily up flight after flight, grateful for my endurance training.
Nothing moves, no one investigates, and I find this development at odds with everything I know of my father and his paranoia. I should have a team of rage swarming all over my ass right now, instead the place is eerily vacant.
Edging the door to level four open I swoop into the passage, crouching low, hinging left and right aiming, ready to fire. There is no movement.
I have exactly two minutes before the back-up generators kick in. I have to get her out before then. It's paramount.
Checking with Jude, I hiss under my breath, “Enemy movement?”
“Nothing,” returns immediately.
The tension in my shoulders vices with a wave of cold apprehension. This feels like a set-up. I feel like I'm walking into a trap.
Bulleting down the corridor I unpocket a grenade, ready to blow me and everyone in here into a crimson cloud of vapour if anyone is waiting in ambush.
Counting the doors, I do one more sweep, a frantic sense of urgency gripping me at the lack of retaliation. Edging slowly, using my shoulder, I have the clip in my mouth, ready to pull if anything untoward is awaiting my approach.
Looking up, checking the hairline crack around the door for triggers, there doesn't seem to be one in place. Opening it a smidgen, I check the edge around the door again. It's clear.
Shoving the door wide I drop to the floor, rolling, using the detector for trip wires, infrared beams, anything that could be waiting to initiate death.
Amazed by the sheer lack of protection around his prime asset, I leopard crawl to the far side of the room, scooting against the wall and looking under the tables, doing a full three-sixty around the brainwashing cell.
She's alone.
My heart is ramming up against my ribcage, making me pant as alarm surges cortisol through my system. Rushing, I unbelt my babe by loosening buckles, horrified that she doesn't react in any way.
It's now or never.
Speaking into my com's, I whisper, “Target acquired. Initiate phase two in eighty seconds. If I don't make it out inside the window, blow us all to kingdom come.”
I have sixty seconds to get her to the underground tunnel.
Carrying her in my arms as I can't fireman lift her because of the pregnancy, I burst back into the corridor, vulnerable now that I have the victim to hinder me. Checking left and right, up and down, no enemy fire is forthcoming. I reholster my firearm, shrugging to readjust the rifle slung over my shoulder, and burn calories with my desperate charge back to the stairwell. Sprinting, I shove my shoulder into the stairwell door, pausing long enough to do a perimeter sweep up, and then down.
Still no movement.
What the hell is going on?
I don't have time, hopping onto the bannister I slide us down floor after floor, my bunched muscles beginning to throb with tension.
Hitting the subterranean access point I rest her on the floor, holding the grenade again as I pry the door open, expecting a bullet in the face.
Nothing.
Fuck, need to get out now! We're out of time.
Hefting her back in my arms, I run like Satan's about to butt-fuck me, sprinting flat-out into the deathly still night.

1 Sept 2013

Hello... Amanda Egan

I'm absolutely over the moon to have several best selling chick lit authors popping round for a chat over the next week or so. The first one is the totally inspirational author, Amanda Egan. 
So, let's get on with it...


When did you first start reading Chick Lit?
I guess my earliest Chick Lit was Enid Blyton and Noel Streatfield when I was a little girl. I firmly believe these are early forms of the genre and get young girls started on it. I devoured these books and felt as if I could climb into them and live the characters’ lives. I was that young girl at boarding school or the dancer in ‘Ballet Shoes'. As a teen, I worked in a library and discovered the Jilly Cooper short reads - Imogen, Bella etc - I couldn’t get enough of them! Ditzy heroines and hunky heroes - perfect.
Amanda - I was obsessed with Jilly Cooper's short reads too. They were amazing! :D

When did you first start writing Chick Lit?
I’ve written for as long as I can remember. My desk hides many abandoned manuscripts from years gone by - even a half written Mills & Boon! My first completed novel was ‘Diary of a Mummy Misfit’ in 2007. I’d found I had time on my hands to read endless chick lit novels and suddenly decided that I could finally do it myself. I’ve never looked back.

What is it about this genre that appeals to you the most? Do you read other genres? If so, which?
I just love a happy ending! We all know that chick lit will see the heroine struggle in some way but we also know that, at the end of the day, she’ll get her man. I like the giggles, the romance and the twists and turns the writer takes us on to get there. I tend to stick purely to reading the genre because I feel it’s part of my job - researching what’s out there, what’s working and how things are changing.

Name one of your favourite Chick Lit books?
Oh! Soooo tricky! I can’t, I really can’t. I love the ones where I really feel that the writer has taken me into the character’s head and their past. I think Lisa Jewel is just the best at doing this. I loved ‘31 Dream Street’ and ‘Friend of the Family’.

What's the title of your latest book? Can you tell us about it?
My latest published book is ‘Lottie’s Luck'. It’s about a girl who has always appeared to have good fortune - until things start to go horribly wrong. Has her luck run out or is fate taking over and guiding her in a new direction?
I also have a Christmas novella due for release in October and a new novel out in December. It’s a busy time!

What inspired you to write it?
It will sound really silly but it was an advert on TV for a Bingo website called ‘Lucky Pants’ - suddenly I had a plot forming!

Is it part of a series?
No, it’s a stand alone book.

Who designs your covers?
I buy the images from iStock photos, after HOURS of trawling their site and then hubbie and son work on the title, font etc. I’m very proud of my covers - they make me want to read the books!

If your book was made into a film, who would you cast?
The book that I feel would be most successful on the big screen is ‘Stilettos & Stubble'. It’s set in a drag club so it’s filled with glamour, bitching and laughter, and would have a fab soundtrack. I’d cast Miranda Hart as the lead.
Oooooh - sounds fab! I love Miranda Hart!

What's your favourite Chick Lit book that made it to the big screen?
‘Miss Pettigrew Lives For a Day’ - just WOW! It’s pretty as a picture to watch and transports you to the world of 1930’s glamour and romance.

Who is your all time favourite Chick Lit character?
I honestly couldn’t pick just one - sorry!

Name one Chick Lit author who you think deserves to be better known.
My fellow Indie friend, Michelle Betham. She works incredibly hard and is a constant support to me. We started on this journey at the same time so we feel like kindred spirits. Her books are very different to mine - mainly saucy and racy! You can find them here.
I know Michelle! She's FAB too :D

Who would play you in the movie of your life?
photo credit: moviesinla via photopin cc
I'd love Meryl Streep to play me in the movie of my life. I know she's a bit older than me but she's just one of those weird actresses who can seem to morph into anyone! I admire her comic timing but she can also make me cry at the drop of a hat.

Speed Round...
Top drink to make you tipsy? White wine.
Shopaholic or shopadon't? Shopaholic - definitely!
Sky high heels or closer to the ground? Depends on the occasion! Flats in the summer, heels with the right thing and I love high-heeled boots (as well as flat ones!) Cheating a bit there!
E.L. James or Jilly Cooper? Definitely Jilly Cooper.
Cry baby or tough cookie? Cry baby but working on it.

For more details about Amanda and her fabulous books, visit her blog, right here or on Twitter.
To get your hold of her books, check out:
Amazon.com
Amazon UK
Lulu
Facebook

Tomorrow, Mandy Baggot is here!!

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