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Showing posts with label New York Bestselling Author. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York Bestselling Author. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

Spotlight Author with Larrisa Ione

I have New York Times Bestselling Author, Larrisa Ione visiting my blog today. Even though she is a very busy woman she has agreed to answering a few short questions for us. And I am ecstatic. I have to say that I have been blessed with all of the amazing authors that have given me the privilege of interviewing them. Larrisa being one of them. You may also know her as the multi-published Sydney Croft. She's here today to talk to us about her latest release SIN UNDONE. Here's a sneak peak.

HER TOUCH IS DEADLY As the only female Seminus demon ever born, master assassin Sinead Donnely is used to being treated like an outcast. She spent decades enslaved, and now vows she'll die before she'll relinquish her freedom again. then Sin's innate ability t kill her enemies goes awry: She creates a lethal new werewolf virus that sparks a firestorm of panic and violence. HIS HUNGER CAN'T BE DENIED Half-werewolf, half-vampire Connell Dearghul is charged with bringing in Sin to face punishment for the plague. And she's no stranger: He's bound to her by blood, and the one sexual encounter they shared has left them hungering for her raw sensuality. Worse, Sin is the underworld's most wanted and Con soon learns he's the only one who can help her... and that saving her life might mean sacrificing his own.
Wow! It sounds amazing! Where does your inspiration come from?

Everywhere really. I get ideas from TV, the news, real life. And I find inspiration to actually sit down and get the book written when I read a great novel.

Can you give us an idea how long a completed manuscript takes from start to finish?

It generally takes me 6 months to a year to write a book. I tend to be a slow writer, and I always need a lot of revision and rewrites, both before I turn in the book to my editor, and after.

What are you reading right now? If nothing at the moment then what do you like to read when you have time?

Actually, right now I'm re-reading The Marshall Plan for Writing A Novel, by Evan Marshall. See. I'm currently plotting the second book in the Lords of Deliverance series (a spin off of the Demonica series about the 4 Horsemen of the Apocalypse,) so I always go running back to the basics when I start a new novel. And yet, I never write a book the same way. It's weird! For fun, I'm not reading anything, sadly. But when I get the time, I love paranormal romance, historical fiction, and fantasy. Can't get enough of any of those genres!
What is the most important advice you can give to aspiring authors?

Don't sweat the small stuff. Learn the craft, learn to write well, but don't obsess about the little things. It's very easy to edit your voice right out of your work if you go over every sentence looking for the perfect word, the perfect structure. Before I got published, I spent a lot of time editing my stories to death before sending out to editors. i got SO close to selling, and it wasn't until I finally just let myself go, let my voice fly and be a little raw, that I got The Call.

Larissa, can you give a glimpse into a writers life. Your writers life!;-)

Coffee, coffee, and more coffee!!! Oh, and pajamas. Yep, it's a glamorous life. *g* Seriously, that's about what it's like. I get up in the morning, get my son off to school, sit down with coffee, and write. I usually work out at ome point during the day, but after my shower, I get right back into my pajamas. And drink more coffee...

Where can we find out more about you and your books?

At www.LarissaIone.com where you can check out all my books, upcoming releases, and you can read free short stories. I also have pages dedicated only to animals, since I am a huge animal lover. I have a especially large interest in feline diet and diabetes, since I've had more experience with that than I'd have liked. You can also check out my alter ego, Sydney Croft, at www.SydneyCroft.com. Sydney is a name I share with author Stephanie Tyler, who writes military romance. We blended together our interests to write erotic paranormal action-adeventure, and we're just finishing up our ACRO series under the Sydney Croft name.
Larissa, thank you for being a guest here at Micole Writes Romance. It has been a pleasure!

Thank you so much for having me! I really enjoyed it!
Faithful readers, I will see you next week!

Hugs

Micole

Thursday, May 27, 2010

TASTE OF TEMPTATION by New York Times Bestselling Author, Cheryl Holt

I am back to talk about Cheryl Holt's newest release TASTE OF TEMPTATION. The last time she visited the blog she was celebrating the release of the first book in the "Spinster's Cure" trilogy, PROMISE OF PLEASURE. Now book two of the three is out and I can't wait to get it!!! Today I am here to give you a little taste of what we all have to look forward to in June! Are you ready?

New York Times bestselling author CHERYL HOLT presents the second sizzling story in a bold new trilogy in which passion—and a few drops from a magical elixir—leads to the sensual education of an innocent governess…

TASTE OF TEMPTATION
Helen Hamilton is a twenty-five-year-old spinster with no income and no prospects who struggle to care for her two orphaned sisters. Destitute and only a heartbeat away from the streets, Helen applies for a position as a governess to the younger siblings of Captain Tristan Odell, the oldest and illegitimate son of notorious philanderer, the Earl of Hastings. But when Tristan turns Helen away, her future seems as desperate as her options. Determined to do whatever it takes to support her sisters, Helen ends up at a brothel, where she agrees to sell herself as a mistress to a client of wealth and prestige. She even drinks a potion to make men desire her--and is shocked when the man who buys her is non other than Tristan. he too is shocked--and aroused by the possibilities. He hires Helen, but offers her more than a position as governess. Enmeshed in an affair of unrestrained desire, their passion quickly grows, as does an unexpected danger that could soon destroy them both...

That's it my friends. That's all you get!!! You'll have to make a run to the bookstore the first of June! For more information about Cheryl or her books you can check out her website at www.cherylholt.com

Thanks for stopping in!

Hugs

Micole

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Spotlight Author with New York Times Bestselling Author Sandra Brown

I am working on my six-month anniversary here at Micole Writes Romance! Those six months have been filled to the brim with happiness and many challenges both in writing career and life in general! By the time this blog posts, my family and I will have moved into a new home. Our first purchased home! ;-) Both exciting and scary! My oldest child will be graduating from high school within a couple of weeks and starting a new life. Again exciting and scary! With all of these new beginnings I feel a celebration is in order! I couldn't think of a better way to kick off the celebration than spotlighting one of my very favorite authors! She's beautiful, intelligent, kind, and such an inspiration. It is with great honor that I introduce my guest, Sandra Brown.

Let's get down to business...

Being an author comes with its fare share of joys and disappointments whether you are just starting or you have been in this business for many years. All of us need advice no matter where we are on this journey. What is the most valuable piece of advice that you have received through out your writing career that you would like to pass along to other authors out there?

The most valuable advice came to me from the editor, Alicia Condon. I was writing Intimate Moments for Silhouette. The trend at the time was humor. Writers were turning out very funny books. While I like to think that I have a funny line of dialog every now and then. I knew this wasn't my forte. I was writing about characters in strife! Worried that my books would be lost in the comic shuffle, I consulted Alicia about it. She said, "Keep doing what you do. It's what drew readers to you in the first place." So I've kept doing what I do. I've written historicals, contemporaries, thrillers, and something as different as RAINWATER, but with each book, I've tried to remain true to my "voice." A big mistake for a writer would be to follow a trend just for the sake of following it.

What do you enjoy most about being an author?

I enjoy most the storytelling process. My favorite day is one in which I can separate myself from the real world and spend hours of uninterrupted time with my characters. I love the make-believe! When I was a kid, my friends and I would say, "Play like..." And then fill in he blank. As a fiction writer I get to "play like" every day. What I like the least is having to deal with the business. It's a necessary evil, and I'm grateful that I have business to deal with! But it's not nearly as much fun as lying and playing God.

Every author that I have spoken to has their own writing process. Some spend weeks working on character building charts. Some use post it notes to plot their entire book. Others pull pictures from magazines and make a story board of sorts. Whats your writing process and how long would you say it takes when a new idea is sparked from sketching out the details to getting to THE END?

I start with an idea. I hasten to say that some ideas don't want to be books. Those ideas just sit there and go nowhere. For their lack of cooperation, I've had to cast aside some great ideas!

But when one starts to expand in my mind, I add to it, subtract from it, massage it, turn it this way and that. It's sort of like a combination lock: when all the tumblers are in place, it opens. that's what I call the "ah-ha" moment. That's when all the elements of the idea become a story. Up to that point, I've been taking handwritten notes. After the ah-ha moment, I go to the keyboard.

I don't do detailed character sketches because I don't know the characters yet. I have a rough idea of what each is like, what his or her goals are, and why it's going to be difficult for them to achieve those goals. But I prefer putting them inside the story, and letting them gradually introduce themselves to me--their strengths, weaknesses, traits, insecurities. I don't "cast" them like actors in a movie. I don't create them, so much as summon them. I feel like they are already there in my subconscious, waiting on me to find them. (You talk like this long enough and people think you're certifiable!)

At this stage, I also write a bullet point synopsis of the story, so that I (and my publisher) know basically what it's about and where it's ging. Again, I don't want to know every scene, because I like going to work everyday and waiting to see what will happen. Some of the best plot twists in my books weren't in the original synopsis.

After getting input from my editor on this outline (for lack of a better word), I write the first draft. I get the story on paper, so that it becomes official. This draft takes several months to write. When it's finished, I send it to my editor (usually with a heartfelt apology for how awful it is) and upon getting notes, I write a second draft.

This is the crafting draft, and it's as important as the first one, maybe more so. I rewrite just about every sentence, every word. I milk each scene for all it's worth. I check to see if all the scenes are engaged. Does that scene move the story along. or is it self-indulgent? Is it boring? Are the characters behaving realistically? This draft takes another several months.

The third draft is to check for pacing and make sure all the holes have been plugged. then the fourth draft is a read through--just in case I've missed something during the first three.

All of this takes a year.

Mrs. Brown, you have an amazing back list, one that I hope to have one day. Out of all of your books, which one would you say is your favorite?

I rarely answer this question, but I will tell you the ones that stand out in memory for one reason or another.


SLOW HEAT IN HEAVEN, because it was my "crossover" book. And I loved Cash Boudreaux
. The story was built around him.

THE TEXAS! Trilogy: LUCKY, CHASE, and SAGE., because they were such charming chracters, and I loved the time I spent with them. they were fascinating to watch. This was one of those instances when characters stepped into the spotlight inside my head and said, "Write about us."

ENVY because it's about a writer. it was one of the rare plots that came to me full-blown. All the elements were there in one afternoon. It was a writing challenge to weave the two storylines together, and I enjoyed that. I also loved the setting.

RAINWATER This story, these characters demanded that I write them. I had no choice. I simply loved them and everything about this book.

If you were a book, what your back cover blurb be?

Born in a small town in central Texas, Sandra Brown, enjoyed a happy childhood. She was a daydreamer and chronic reader. Her imagination was fed by books filled with romance, adventure, and mystery. But was imagination enough to see her dreams fulfilled? Bolstered by her one true love, Michael, she embarked on the adventure of her life. Armed with determination and a desire to tell stories, she reached toward a distant goal, only to discover that attaining one star opens up the pathway to many more - each littered with obstacles.

Wow! (tear, sniffle, tear) Mrs. Brown, I want to thank you so much for giving me this opportunity. It has been a great honor to have you here at Micole Writes Romance. I would also like to thank my friend Sarah Simas from The Lovestruck Novice blog, who so graciously let me borrow that back cover blurb question. ;-)

This interview a teaser. If you would like to find out more information about New York Times Bestselling Author, Sandra Brown you can find her on the web at www.sandrabrown.net

Thanks for stopping by. We love to hear comments and questions. See you next time friends.

Hugs

Micole


Thursday, April 29, 2010

Spotlight Author with Lori Handeland

Multi-published, and very talented, New York Times Bestselling Author, Lori Handeland is joining me here today at Micole Writes Romance. It seems this woman can write anything and she has! From historical, contemporary, series and paranormal romance, as well as urban fantasy! Sheesh! Let me catch my breath!!! My brain only works in one mode. And from the looks of things that mode is Turtle (slow)! ;-) This woman is like the hare she's done passed me up apparently over fifty times!!!! Yes you are reading right. She has over fifty books in print! I have to say I'm a wee bit jealous!;-( She's here today to share with us two of her latest releases CHAOS BITES and SHAKESPEARE UNDEAD. So lets not waste any more time. Lori tell us...

CHAOS BITES is the fourth entry in my urban fantasy series, The Phoenix Chronicles. In it Doomsday once again lies in wait for demon slayer Elizabeth Phoenix. Several weeks ago she had no choice but to kill a man she loved. Now he's started to invade her dreams.
She's also acquired a new set of paranormal powers along with responsibility for a shape-shifting baby.

Nothing is at it seems as Liz combs through the chaos of her new life while trying to outrun death every turn. She's going to need all the help she can get since every demon on earth is hell-bent on her destruction.

SHAKESPEARE UNDEAD is a mashed up--in the tradition of bestselling PRIDE AND PREJUDICE AND ZOMBIES or ABRAHAM LINCOLN VAMPIRE HUNTER in this book we discover how Bard got his bite!

William Shakespeare was one of history's greatest writers, a master of words with his body of work that is truly impressive... some may say a little too impressive for a single man to accomplish in one lifetime. perhaps, like many have speculated, he had assistance, or perhaps the explanation was more... unusual.

Who was William Shakespeare?
Who was the Dark Lady of the Sonnets?
Why are the undead stalking the alleyways of London?
And can they be stopped?

Something is definitely rotten in the state of Denmark.

This book takes the reader on a wild ride through twisted streets and shadowed graveyards of Elizabethan London where Will Shakespeare and his lady love, Kate, fight zombies and vampires in a desperate attempt to save themselves, the people of London and Queen Elizabeth from a nefarious plot.

What do Lori Handeland fans have to look forward to in 2010?

CHAOS BITES will be released April 27th 2010
SHAKESPEARE UNDEAD on June 8th 2010
And the Nightcreature Novels will return in November with MARKED BY THE MOON--set in Alaska

Can you tell us what you are working on right now?

Another Nightcreature Novel, scheduled dor March 2011. This one is titled MOON CURSED and takes place at Loch Ness.

What do you feel makes your writing unique?

I have always felt I have a distinctive voice. My books are sexy, scary, and funny. I also make sure my books are fast paced. One thing I loathe when I read a books myself is when the story lags, so I try to keep everything clipping right along in my own books for 400 pages.

Some writers say that they have a story that has to be told others say that the characters come to them and demand that their story be told... how does it work for you?

My books usually start with a story, and the characters come from there. Unless it's a series and we've met the character in a previous book. Then the character's usually start talking first.

If you had to pick one character in your books, who would be your favorite? And why? Or if you don't want to pick a favorite... which one do you connect with the most? And why?

I've always liked Liz Phoenix from The Phoenix Chronicles--a can-do woman who stops at nothing to save the world. And she's funny too.

Liz is like you and me in many ways--she's lost things--her job, a man--but she keeps trying. She's never been faced with anything this tough before, but she certainly isn't going to quit.

I'm a huge fan of dark worlds, dangerous heroes and kick ass heroines who save the day. Probably because I don't want to live in such a world and if I met a man like Sawyer or Jimmy I'd run the other way. If I behaved like Liz, I'd wind up with a fat lip! But to imagine myself as savior of the world, with incredible supernatural powers, the object of lust for two incredibly hot and powerful men... that's fun!

What's your writing process? Do you carefully plan every detail of your novels, or do you fly by the seat of your pants and let your characters and the story take you on that wild ride to the end?

I've found that if I plan too much before I start writing, I'm bored by the story before I begin. So I know the basics of the plot and the characters, but I let the people and the story lead me.

Where does your inspiration come from?

Hard to say, I just hope it keeps coming.

What's one thing that you know now that you wished you knew when you started your journey as a writer?

That just getting published anywhere by anyone isn't a good thing. You're better off to wait for a publisher that can publish you in a way that will advance your career rather than kill it. A low print run and/or sell through can take years to recover from. If you believe in yourself and your writing don't sell either of them short.

Very good advice! ;-)

Do you have any other events o appearances coming up?

I will be speaking at the Wisconsin Romance Writers Conference on May 14-16 and the Southeast Wisconsin Festival of Books on June 18-19. I will be signing books at both of these events as well as at the Romance Writers of America national conference in Nashville July 28-31.

Thank you Lori. I am so glad you were able to join us here at Micole Writes Romance. It has been a pleasure having you here. Now tell us... where can we find your books?

Borders, Waldens, Barnes and Noble, Books a Million, Amazon, some Wal Marts but not all. remember that any bookstore can order any book so if you don't see them ask. All the Nightcreature Novels and the Phoenix Chronicles are still in print and can be ordered with the click of a computer key.

Readers if you are interested in learning more about Lori, please visit her website. It's truly amazing! www.lorihandeland.com There you can join the Full Moon Club, a monthly newsletter where you'll find information about full moons, supernatural creepy-crawlies, recommended paranormal reads, recipes and more. There's a monthly contest where you can win books also. Make sure to check it out. until next time my friends.

hugs

Micole
















Monday, March 22, 2010

Spotlight Author with New York Times Best Selling Author, Cheryl Holt

Wow, I can hardly believe that we are a quarter of the way into 2010. Sort of crazy to think about isn't it? Three months have passed since I started my blog. Even harder to believe, is the fact that I have been biting my nails with excitement for almost three months, waiting to share my latest interview with all of my friends. I would like to welcome and introduce, New York Times Bestselling Author, Cheryl Holt.

If you like a spicy read then Cheryl's your girl. She is a master at weaving a tale that will scoop you up and make you lose track of time. She is renowned for her great characters, her pithy dialogue, drama, emotion, and sexual tension. Her stories are so captivating and laced with steamy love scenes, one read friends, and I guarantee you will be hooked!

So with that all said, let's get started!

Cheryl, tell us about your up coming release PROMISE OF PLEASURE.

My new book is the first book in my "Spinster's Cure" trilogy. I've never written an actual trilogy before-all of my previous novels have been single titles-so this is a new venture for me. I'm excited to hear what my fans think of it.

The linking character for the three books is a shady peddler and charlatan named Philippe Dubois. He sells love potions, and he claims he has a potion that will "cure" spinsters so that they marry. He insists that if a woman drinks his Spinster's Cure while staring at the man she hopes to wed, she will be married to him within a month.

The potion is a fake, but for some reason his potions work anyway. In three of the novels, the heroines are all lonely women who, for various reasons, haven't been able to marry. They yearn to wed and have a home of their own. Dubois coerces them into buying the potion, and they drink it, but of course, they wind up staring at the hero instead of the man they'd hoped to wed. And then the fun begins!

The first novel, PROMISE OF PLEASURE, is actually my version of Cinderella. The heroine is a sweet, kind woman who lives with her wicked stepmother and two wicked stepsisters. The hero is visiting their hoe in order to pursue an engagement to one of the wicked stepsisters. So after the heroine drinks the Spinster's Cure potion, the hero is inexplicably drawn to her. An illicet affair begins that is fraught with drama and danger for the heroine.

This book sizzles with all of my best writing devices!

I can hardly wait!!! When can we expect to see PROMISE OF PLEASURE hit the shelves?

The three books are coming from Berkley Books. Here is a list of the titles and release dates.

PROMISE OF PLEASURE-- April, 2010
TASTE OF TEMPTATION-- June, 2010
DREAMS OF DESIRE-- January, 2011

You can bet I will be scouting them out as soon as their release dates hit!!!

I read somewhere that when you began writing romance you were a lawyer. How did you find the time to work such a demanding job and write, which is equally demanding?

I am an attorney, and I guess once you're an attorney, you're "always" an attorney; you never stop being one. But when I started writing novels, I was no longer practicing law. I was actually a stay-at-home mom, with two babies at home. I needed to replace the income I'd given up by staying home with my children, so I started writing books.

Many female novelists begin writing books when they're home with their young children, so I was simply starting out in the same fashion as many successful novelists. And publishers find many of their new novelists from professional woman who have left the workforce to stay at home with their kids.

I've seen your book trailers and loved them. Do you feel that using book trailers to advertise helps boost your sales?

I first started using book trailers in 2006 for my book, TOO WICKED TO WED. I met a vendor t a conference who was the first person to get the idea of making book trailers, and I was mesmerized by the idea-and by the visual possibilities that it opened up for book.

The woman is Sheila English, and her company s Circle of Seven Productions. Although many companies have followed her lead and started making book videos, Sheila's company is the top company in this growing business. They have produced a video for me for each book released since, TOO WICKED TO WED, and each one has been great.

I think they are a fabulous marketing tool. Although it's a well-kept secret, writers don't make very much money. But we are under enormous pressure to advertise, which is very expensive. But with books, it's generally accepted that advertising doesn't help very much. A book's popularity spreads through word of mouth-from one person recommending it o the next. So it's always a dicey proposition to advertise and it's difficult to decide where to spend the money.

With the advent of the web and sites like You Tube, I get enormous distribution and exposure from a book video. For the initial set up price, it can be sent to hundreds of venues where people can view it, so I get a lot of "bang" for my buck.

In my first video TOO WICKED, Sheila distributed the video out on the web and I had a 12% jump in my opening week sales. It's impossible to track whether the video was the reason, but I've always believed that it was-or that it helped significantly.

How long was your road to publication?

My "road" to publishing was actually not that long. I was continually writing for about four years before I sold my first novel. The first one I sold, THE WAY OD THE HEART, was the seventh completed manuscript that I had finished.

This is actually not very long in the scheme of learning to write a novel. It's generally assumed that "anyone" can write a book, and many many people try it. But a novel is a highly complex, difficult art form, and it takes many years to figure out how to do it and do it well. (And to do it over and over again.) Most people never figure it out or they give it up. I've always felt lucky that I was able to sell after only four years.

What is one peice of advice you would give aspiring authors?

Actually, I have "two" pieces of advice:

You learn to write by practicing, which means you need to write everyday, all the time, constantly. It is the same exact process as playing the piano. "Art" starts in your head, then comes out your fingertips onto a keyboard.

Yet if you were a pianist, it would never occur to you that you could audition for the LA Symphony unless you'd practiced for 20 years or so. The cognitive process for playing the piano and for writing a book is exactly the same, but for some reason, people think they can write a book without practicing.

The fact is that it simply takes years to learn how to write a novel. So you have to be dedicated and persistent. You need to write and write and write. That's how you figure it out.

Also, you need to read constantly. You should always have a book in your hand. As you're first starting out as a writer, you should pick a genre you want to write in-whether it's romance, or sci fi, or whatever-and you start writing and writing and writing manuscripts in that genre so you can start to figure it out.

At the same time, you should read every book that comes out in that genre. You should also read every bestseller; and you should read every book that gets a starred review from the trade magazine Publisher's Weekly. You should read everything you can.

I don't know why it works, but if you don't read all the time, you will never write very well.

You should know the names of all the writers in your genre, who publishes them, and who the big editors are in that genre. This is the most competitive endeavor you will ever undertake, and the people who succeed at it "make" it happen.

Learn to write, know the market, learn the "language" of publishing, be ready to jump in in a competitive way.

Wow! What wonderful advice! Thank you for that Cheryl. Now can you tell me what is the hardest thing for you about being a writer?

You don't make very much money at it. Especially at the beginning. Although people never believe this when I tell them, I was paid $2,000. for my first book, and $7,500 for my tenth book. It just takes a long, long time to make any income worth mentioning, and most writers never get to that point.

People jump into it, hoping to earn a second income, or to make a ton of money so that they can quit their "real" job, but that rarely happens. It's just like acting, where a few people like Tom Cruise and Tom Hanks, make millions, but everybody else is working weekends and scrambling for bit parts.

You can't count on earning a living from it, and even when you begin to make money, you never know when a check will arrive, or how much it will be. It's daunting and frustrating and nothing like what a person expects when they go into publishing and hope to succeed at it.

What is the most rewarding thing about being a writer?

I work at home, at the computer in my bedroom. I live a very isolated life, where I work 60-70 hours per week; I work alone, and I rarely interact with grown-ups! I write my manuscripts, then send them off to New York, where people I've never met turn them into books. They're sold around the world. Then a year or so later, I receive emails from readers around the globe-Pakistan, South Africa, Italy, Poland, Japan, Singapore, Australia-and it's amazing to me that I can touch so many lives in a positive way. I'm grateful that I've had such the chance to interact with the world's population.

That sounds amazing. Where does your inspiration come from?

I have been writing novels for 15 years now. So it's not a matter of "inspiration." I constantly get little germs of ideas. It will be just a one or two sentence idea, such as "a woman's brother gambles away the family estate, and when he has nothing left to wager, he bets her chastity. And loses!" (This is the premise of the book I mention earlier, TOO WICKED TO WED.)

I keep a running list of those tiny ideas-there are dozens and dozens of ideas on the list-and then, when it's time to write a new novel, I get out the list and start going through it. I have to decide if I can take a small idea and turn it into a 400 page manuscript. I really struggle: Can I add enough subsidiary characters to this idea? Can I add sufficient plot twists and turns? Can I make a villain wicked enough? Can I make the hero heroic enough?

Some ideas work and some don't.

Do you plot your books or do you let the ideas take you on an adventure until the end?

I am definite plotter. By the time I actually sit down to write a novel, I have it completely mapped out. I know what will happen to each and every character, what will happen in each chapter and each scene, what will happen with each storyline, and I even have much of the dialogue actually rattling around in my head.

I don't know why a writer would write a novel in any other fashion. Novels are not "random" events. There are specific plot devices, character interactions, and pacing structures that need to happen at certain points in the book. When I hear that a writer's characters "took off" in a new direction all on heir own, or that the storyline "had a mind of its own", it tells me that the writer is very new, inexperienced, and hasn't done the sort of detailed prep wok that will keep the novel on track to the end.

Pick one of YOUR characters that is your favorite, which one will it be and why?

My favorite character is also my fans' favorite character: John Clayton, Viscount Wakfield, from my 2003 novel, COMPLETE ABANDON. This is my fans' most beloved novel, and it's because John embodied all the heroic traits that female readers crave.

If you're a reader and haven't read it yet, I highly encourage you to give it a try. You'll devour every page! If you are a writer, I encourage you read it so that you can see how to write a yummy, seductive, heroic character. He's the best hero I ever drafted, and I am renowned for writing some of the best hero's in women's fiction.

Thank you Cheryl for this interview. You can find Cheryl's books on the shelf at any of the larger bookstore chains, such as Barnes & Noble or Borders. Or through any of the on-line booksellers such as Amozon. All of her books are in print and still available. Or yoou can check her out at her website www.cherylholt.com

Now for a little fun...

Vampire or Wolf-

Vampire

Love letters or Roses-

Roses

Night Owl or Early Bird-

Night Owl

Milk Chocolate or Dark Chocolate-

Milk Chocolate

Cowboy or Businessman-

Cowboy

Thank you all for spending time at Micole Writes Romance with Cheryl and I. I hope if you are not already a fan of hers you will run to the bookstore and pick up one of her books! You will not be disappointed!!!

xoxoxoxoxo

Micole Black