FreshFiction...for today's reader

Authors and Readers Blog their thoughts about books and reading at Fresh Fiction journals.

Friday, September 14, 2007

Vicki Lewis Thompson | How I killed off the "Reading With Ripa Book Club"

Vicki Lewis Thompson It’s not my fault. I swear, I wasn’t the one who killed Kelly Ripa’s book club. Sure, I know it looks suspicious. In 2002 she was rockin’ along with her anti-Oprah picks, six of them, and didn’t we love it? Books with happy endings were getting on a TV talk show! Carly Phillips made it! Romance writers had a shot!

More important – it was all about me – I had a shot. I figured Nerd in Shining Armor might make the grade with Kelly. Then she went on maternity leave and Reading with Ripa took a short break. But the book club message boards were still up, and no one was throwing in the towel, least of all me.

Time marched on, however. My book came out the end of April, 2003, and no word from the LIVE folks indicating the book club would resume. It seems Kelly was home nursing her baby. I ask you, where were her priorities? Had no one suggested that she could nurse a baby and read a romance at the same time?

NERD IN SHINING ARMOR by Vicki Lewis ThompsonIn May, Kelly returned from maternity leave, and I held my breath. I held my breath for a very long time, so if I look a little peaked when next you see me, remember that I held my breath for approximately five weeks back in 2003 while I waited to see if a)Reading with Ripa was back in business and b)whether my submission had a chance in hell of making it.

Oh, glorious day, the answer was YES. I found out the first week in June that I was the seventh pick, baby! I could breathe again, which allowed me to drink copious margaritas in celebration. So I was on the show, the book hit the Times and my life changed forever.

Today LIVE with Regis and Kelly is celebrating twenty years on the air, and I’m thrilled for them. I wish them the very best! But it pains me to tell you that Kelly won’t be using the occasion to announce another Reading with Ripa Book Club Pick.

OVER HEXED by Vicki Lewis ThompsonYou see, there was no eighth pick. After my appearance on the show, the book club DIED. There, I’ve said it. Dear God, was it the white Capri pants paired with the deep blue blouse? Should I have gone with gold instead of silver jewelry? Was it my use of the word crucible? How did I go wrong? How did I manage to screw it up for the rest of the romance writing world???

Whatever it was, I deeply apologize. I’m very sorry, and mostly I’m sorry for myself, because I have this new series coming out, starting with Over Hexed on October 2, and I could really, really use the boost.

Vicki Lewis Thompson
http://www.vickilewisthompson.com/

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Thursday, September 13, 2007

Jaci Burton | Genre Jumping

One of the questions I get asked most is whether it's difficult to write in different genres.

The answer is absolutely not. I love genre jumping. In fact, I think it would make me insane if I were to write in only one genre. Perhaps that's because I've been writing in multiple genres since I started writing. It's impossible for me to stick to one...flavor. I love so many.

When I first started writing for Ellora's Cave, I started in contemporary, then branched out into paranormal. Then I got this great idea about faeries so I started a fantasy series. Then came futuristics and...well, you get the idea. I can't seem to stay with one genre, and I'm fine with that.

Several years and multiple publishers later, I've pretty much settled on mainstream paranormal romance and contemporary erotic romance...mostly. And that was because I was given the wonderful opportunity to write for Bantam Dell and Berkley, and each contracted me for something completely different, which was like a dream come true. I've always wanted to write paranormal romance, and my writing roots were in erotic romance. Now I can do both. And I also write for Samhain Publishing where I can mix it up with any genre I like. So I guess I'm not settling for just too after all. (Do you sense the craziness here? Heh)

But there's a method to my madness (Yes...brace yourselves...I'm about to get to the point). Genre jumping allows me a break. When I write my Demon Hunter series for Bantam Dell, I throw myself into the world of demons and the battle between good and evil. There are plots and subplots and twists and turns and romance and hawt sex and the series must continue, so I have to constantly build on that. When I finish a story, the next story I work on is typically a contemporary erotic romance for Berkley--a complete change in genre. It clears my head and allows me to focus on something entirely different. Then I can delve into the world of contemporary characters and their struggle to find love (with fun sex included!). The genres are so different, it's like taking a vacation. By the time I finish my contemporary romance, I'm ready to dive back into the world of the Demon Hunters again.

Really, I have a great job. Or multiple jobs. I get to do different things all the time and I realize how very lucky I am.

Jaci Burton

www.jaciburton.com

Hunting The Demon



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Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Elizabeth Hoyt | Ten Clues That You Are Watching a Really Bad Movie

So, the other day after my computer blew up, I decided that I needed a break from reality and I stuck a DVD in the player, sat back, and prepared to enjoy a whole lot of bare nekkid male chests. But a strange feeling came over me as I watched the previews to the movie. A feeling that I may have chosen A Really Bad Movie.

Herewith is a list of my Ten Clues that perhaps I was not the target audience for the movie 300:

1. The pre-movie advertisements are for violent video games aimed at fourteen-year-old boys.

2. The men are all wearing leather shorts.

3. All the bad guys are ugly or gay or both, and the chief bad guy is wearing gold lipstick.

4. Sacred lepers.

5. Eugenics is a good cultural practice and the only people who are against it are wussy hunchbacks who can't fight like real he-men anyway.

6. The traitor bad guy has a bad guy mustache.

7. The traitor bad guy tells the heroine that the only way she can save the hero is to have skanky sex with him. And she falls for it.

8. War rhinos.

9. The Deep and Meaningful love scene employs more than five positions.

10. The hero says--actually says--that the only way they can lose is if someone tells the Persians about the secret goat track back entrance to Thermopylae. Oh, and then he rejects the hunchback who told him about the secret goat track back entrance. Dude! Use your head!

Bonus 11th Clue: arterial blood spray is used as an artistic device.
So, while this movie was definitely divorced from reality, and certainly had a whole heapin’ spoonful of bare nekkid male chests, I would not recommend it. Instead, if you need your own break from reality, I suggest picking up a good book, such as, oh, The Serpent Prince, out this month. I think you’ll find it more enjoyable.
Cheers!

Elizabeth Hoyt

http://www.elizabethhoyt.com/

THE RAVEN PRINCE, Available Now!
THE LEOPARD PRINCE, Available Now!
THE SERPENT PRINCE, Available Now!
TO TASTE TEMPTATION, May 2008

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Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Colleen Gleason | Research & the Paranormal Historical

I’ve been asked many times about whether I research before writing my historical novels, or as I go. The short answer is: I research as I go.

But that's partly because I've been writing, reading, and watching historical fiction for a long time. So, I already have at least a sense of the era.

I know the basics about what the people wear, how they travel about, what conveniences they have and don't have, etc., so when I sit down to write a book set in the past, I have enough information just to be dangerous.

But the fun part comes as I'm writing, because that's when things start to happen. Usually, I have the bare bones of a plot, but not the details. And the details, in my opinion, are what make a book. And the details are what I research when I'm in the process of writing.

When I have to make decisions--about what someone is wearing in particular, about where a certain house or building is located, about what they might eat at a ball or fete, about a political event that's happening--that's when I do the research for that particular thing. I stop writing and start searching.

I think this works partly because it keeps the whole process from being so intimidating. I don't have to know everything before I start! You can't eat the elephant all in one bite, as one of my bosses used to say--and that's a great mantra for historical research.

For example, when she wrote Unmasqued: An Erotic Novel of the Phantom of the Opera, Colette Gale says she didn't have the best sense of 1887 Paris. “I had enough to start off (I'd read the book, seen the movie), but I didn't have the details.”

She explains, “So when I had Christine and Raoul take a drive through Paris, I had to find out what it might have looked like, and what they might have seen. I was able to answer this question by using three tactics:


1. Googled "Paris 1887" and got lots of stuff

2. Looked at paintings of Paris that were done in the late 19th century

3. Read fiction set during that time period

Paintings particular were helpful to me, because I'm a visual person, and seeing a picture of Paris with the Eiffel Tower just being built gave me an image to work from.

And reading fiction written (and set) during the time in question is really valuable. I can hear how people speak, what words they use, and often get little details that I wouldn't have found otherwise.

So it was fun for me to learn, through this research, that in 1887, the Eiffel Tower was just being built and the Parisians hated it. They thought it was a monstrosity.”

And that brings me to another serendipity about research, and why I do it as I go: it's the gems I find. The little nuggets of detail or information I'm not looking for, but I find accidentally. If I did all the research up front, I may not find these pretty little things.

Here's an example from my own experience: I'm currently writing the third Gardella Vampire Chronicles book, which opens in Rome. I had to decide where a particular church that is important to the Venators (the vampire hunters) is located.

I guess I didn't really have to exactly identify where the church was, but I wanted to. It gives me a better sense of place, too. So I spent about three hours, literally, poring over a book about Rome and then validating my decision to locate the church of Santo Quirinus in what is called the Borgo.

When I started researching the Borgo, I found a lot of interesting information about that area; details that I included in the setting: that the umbrella makers were relegated to this quarter because the wet silk they used smelled so bad, that rosary makers lived in the Borgo, and I even found a painting of the area.

Another question that I’m asked a lot in regards to research, since I write paranormal historicals, is whether the world-building in a non-contemporary time period is more difficult than in a modern one.

I don't think that paranormal world-building in a historical setting is any more difficult than it is in contemporary settings. In fact, in some ways it might be easier.

It's a lot of fun to take a historical fact and twist it to fit my world-building. A perfect example occurs in Rises the Night. I introduce John Polidori, who is the author of The Vampyre (the first book that really portrayed vampires as aristocratic, mysterious creatures that lived amid Society).

My research taught me that John Polidori died in 1820, which is the year in which my book is set. How convenient is that? I also learned that there was some mystery surrounding his death. Hmmm.

Some said he died from poison. Others said he died in an accident.

I decided that he died from a totally different reason--related to the world I've built--and made that an event in my book.

So, to sum up, let me just say that for me, as far as research goes, once I have the basic idea of the time period, the research is just for little details. But the little details (hopefully) are what give the book its flavor and color and authenticity, and paint the picture.

I don't use everything I learn. I don't describe my characters' dress every time they come on the scene, or every single carriage or room. I give enough to paint a wide swath, with a few well-placed details, and that usually works to give a good flavor of setting without bogging the book down.

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Monday, September 10, 2007

Diane Whiteside | Citizen Soldier

Diane WhitesideWhat do those two words mean, anyway? Strong, stalwart, dependable, intelligent, good in a fight. Oh, and definitely an alpha male – at least to a romance author! In fact, it sounds like an good list of things I’d want to find in a hero, doesn’t it?

But when politicians talk about citizen-soldiers, they’re usually speaking about citizens who are about to leave their day jobs and go off to serve their country, probably to fight. That’s an extremely noble calling and I honor anyone who has done it. But hasn’t any such citizen-soldier also been changed – even hardened or scarred – by what he’s seen and done while he served his country?

What interests me, as an author, is what happens when that citizen-soldier comes home and becomes more of a citizen than a soldier. I want to know how his military skills and personality blends into his peacetime world – for example, how he takes the strength and discipline he gained in the military into the civilian world, how his loved ones temper his cynicism, how he learns to sleep quietly at night again. It’s reassuring to know than an ex-soldier can still grab a gun and save his beloved from the villain – but heck, I’d almost expect that of him. It’s far more satisfying for me to hear of someone who was tortured but who has learned to trust again.

The American Civil War left behind many men who knew far, far too much about fighting. Some of them had a home, while others didn’t want to go home. Many of those men headed west beyond the Mississippi.

THE IRISH DEVIL by Diane WhitesideI knew when I plotted The Irish Devil, the first of my Devil books, that my hero had to run a big freighting company. I was certain that William Donovan was a very dangerous fellow, to have survived and profited hauling dynamite through the heart of Apache territory during the worst years of Arizona’s Indian wars.

I certainly didn’t know anything about the sort of men that post-Civil War freighting companies hired. I soon found out those firms were famous for their almost-military discipline which deterred nearly attack from hostile forces – such as Apaches. They managed that trick by hiring primarily military veterans, preferably Confederate veterans.

Shortly afterward, I saw a TV show about a modern-day trucking company which hauls hazardous freight for the Defense Department. It also carries interesting items for museums and other folks who don’t want to talk about where their expensive treasures are. Every one of their drivers was ex-military and looked very dangerous indeed. Hmm…

William Donovan must have hired the Old West’s equivalent of Special Forces’ operators for Donovan & Sons. But in his case, they were citizen-soldiers, men who were ready to settle back into civilian life. Okay, so they weren’t watching grass grow on Main Street but they had turned their backs on the military for a new life. When I write about Donovan & Sons’ men in my Devil books, I can explore the issues that a citizen-soldier faces. By setting it in the Old West, I can up the stakes even more, since my heroine’s life can be at risk.

THE NORTHERN DEVIL by Diane WhitesideLucas Grainger, The Northern Devil, is such a citizen-soldier. He will always do whatever it takes to protect the woman he loves, no matter what, especially since he has no hope of reward, let alone joy. His military career didn’t encourage joy but it did give him honor, strength, and discipline. His sense of honor is what drives him into his marriage of convenience with Rachel Davis. The question is whether his strength and protectiveness will drive her away, since his discipline prevents him from sharing all of his secrets with her.

For more about Lucas and Rachel, please check outThe Northern Devil. The Irish Devil will be re-released in mass-market in October (although it’s available now in trade paperback).

Diane Whiteside
www.dianewhiteside.com


THE NORTHERN DEVIL - August 2007
"Caught by the Tides" in BEYOND THE DARK - December 2007
BOND OF FIRE, volume 2 of the Texas vampire trilogy - January 2008

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