Rachel Thompson

Jack Canon's American Destiny

Wednesday, January 23, 2013

#OBBigBang Orangeberry Big Bang - Pimp Ur Blog 3 by Paul Rice

 

OBBIGBANG

 

Updated on 28th December 2012

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>>>Amazon Listmania

>>>GoodReads Listopia

>>>Giveaway

>>> Big Bang Limerick

Many bloggers and authors have experiences with Google and Amazon that they would like to share. Many more people will benefit from these shared experiences.

The third eBook in the Pimp ur Blog series is now open to multiple co-authors. My offer for Pimp ur Blog Episode Three: Working with Amazon and Google is to publish another edition each time I receive another co-author’s material. I will, of course, publicize each Episode Three edition with press releases, bookmark links on three-dozen social bookmarking sites, blog posts, social media, and inclusion of blurbs for each co-author’s other works.

I will add permanent links to each co-author’s blog or website on each PimpUrBlog.com page. The eventual result will be that each co-author’s name and/or blog will make its way into 100 or so associated links and references in Google’s search results!

The initial Episode Three edition starts with my experiences in working with Google as a blogger by describing how to access the wealth of information that Google Webmaster Tools stores for every blog. I share the details of the tests I ran with a $100 Google AdWords credit, and briefly review what effect the recent changes within Google have had when they filter down to our blogs’ Google search results.

I continue with my experiences in working with Amazon as an author who does not participate in Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing Select program. Episode Three wraps up with some items of interest from the previous eBooks in the Pimp ur Blog series.

Except that Episode Three does not really conclude at all. Anyone who wants to contribute as a co-author will always be welcome!

Buy at Amazon & Smashwords

Genre – Non-Fiction, How-to (G)

Connect with Paul Rice on Facebook & Twitter

Blog - http://pimpurblog.com/

#OBBigBang Orangeberry Big Bang - Dead Perfect by PG Shriver

 

OBBIGBANG

Updated on 28th December 2012

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>>>Amazon Listmania

>>>GoodReads Listopia

>>>Giveaway

>>> Big Bang Limerick

What are you most proud of accomplishing so far in your life? I am most proud of the eleven books I have written and published. I think about the years I spent writing, the amount of time that went into each book, especially the novels, and the fact that I completed them, me, the great procrastinator. I completed eleven books. Even the picture books, for which I drew or painted the illustrations, took so much time. I did it, though! I completed them and I am still working on others. As an instructor, I’ve been told by a few students that my advice saved their lives. As a mother, I have a beautiful, talented, intelligent daughter. I am proud of both of these, also, but those had a choice and made the right one. Those decisions are their accomplishments. My daughter made the choice to give life all she has. That is her accomplishment. My accomplishments are those eleven books.

What’s your favorite place in the entire world? My favorite place in the world is my office. I love sitting at my computer and writing. I could write all day and forget about every other aspect of life. My office, in my room, in my large country home, is my very favorite place. I didn’t write my first book until we moved out to our seventeen acre ranch. It is so peaceful and quiet out here, especially when the neighbors are all at work. I can go for a walk, go to the barn, walk out to our back fence, or just look out the window on a cold day and find the peace I need to go on.

How has your upbringing influenced your writing? My upbringing wasn’t perfect, but then life isn’t perfect. I dealt with a great deal of 70s issues. My father is an alcoholic and spent my youth in and out of rehab centers, and on and off jobs. Once or twice, my mother had to go to work to provide for our family of five. We moved a few times to get away from what my parents thought to be the triggers for Dad’s alcoholism. There was some violence in our family life, and I learned to fear my dad, and his belt. Mother forced his hand when he came home from his out of town job one week and told her he had met somebody else and was in love with her. She packed his bags and gave him the ultimatum. He chose the other woman and left when I was seventeen. Mom couldn’t find a job or get assistance. It was a very trying time. My boss gave me a promotion just so I could provide for my family until my mother found a job. There are some parts of my upbringing that I could have done without, but most of them I wouldn’t trade because I do believe that all of the issues I dealt with as a youth made me who I am today. Those events recreate themselves in my books, and the main character overcomes whatever happens. The upbringing I had makes me a more disciplined person, which also transfers to my writing. Those issues provide the not-so-perfect world in my books that my characters face, and the feelings my characters have that reach out to the reader, and maybe give the reader some comfort knowing they are not alone.

What genre are you most comfortable writing? I am most comfortable writing in the Young Adult genre, though I am dabbling a bit with adult paranormal romance and suspense thrillers. I much prefer the more innocent nature of YA. Paranormal and fantasy are my favorites. I can work in real events to both types of stories without making the events too real for the reader. There have been times while I was engrossed in a book that a detailed event hit a little too close to home and I put the book away. I would go back to them later when I was ready to deal with that particular event. I don’t want my readers to feel that way. I want to approach events subtly, allow them to read about it without even realizing what they just read and when it’s over stop and say, “Wow, I’ve been in that situation!” Fantasy and Paranormal allow me to achieve this reaction.

What inspired you to write your first book? Believe it or not, a spider bite inspired me to write my first book. My husband complained about having been bitten on the bottom of the foot and we had had some spider issues, so he believed a spider bit him. Much of my inspiration comes from nature. The next book I wrote transpired from a true event in our yard between a visiting skunk and our cats. Life is full of inspiration for writers. I don’t usually look for it, but the events always find me and I think to myself, “That would make a good book!” I even have my husband saying that, now, though we disagree a bit on what a good book is.

Did writing this book teach you anything and what was it? Writing this book taught me that I could write a 50,000 + word novel in a month. I wrote Dead Perfect for NaNoWriMo in 2011. It was the most grueling month of my life, with my husband and daughter taking over many of my household and farm duties. I wrote for twelve hours or more a day on the weekends, every morning for a couple of hours before class, and every evening for about four hours, instead of relaxing with my family. It was frustrating, exhilarating, and extremely stressful, but I accomplished it! I was so thrilled to have written an entire rough draft for a novel in one month that it kept me on a high for two more months! In fact, that semester was the only semester that I received a negative student survey comment. The student commented that my “personal goals should not come before my professional work”.

Do you intend to make writing a career? I absolutely intend to make writing a career! I love teaching literature and writing, but I would much prefer dedicating all of my time to writing. At the moment, it appears that it will be my retirement career, but I would love to crank out six novels a year! I have so many ideas for books, so many characters in my head, so many books started, that with a full time job, I don’t know how I will ever get them all completed. I would have to live to be a hundred and twenty to get all of the books written that I have started now. If I could dedicate my entire day to working on them, then I might be able to complete them in six years and keep coming up with new ideas, characters and storylines. I love writing, and it would make me incredibly happy to have nothing else to do but write. I have always desired to become a well-known, popular author. Since the age of seven, that is the only career to which my aspirations always returned.

Have you developed a specific writing style? Yes, I have developed a specific style. When I read a book, I like it to read fast. When I write a book, I try to stay with that style. I prefer to write many short chapters that keep the reader moving forward, then to write less long chapters. I also try to maintain a straightforward approach. I appreciated that in Hemingway’s books, and found that it was much easier for me, the reader, to identify with the characters when the style is straightforward. I also prefer first person narrative because I can really get into the characters’ hearts and minds to develop them. I’ve had success with my series in third person, but my preference is first.

What is your greatest strength as a writer? I think my greatest strength as a writer is my ability to get into character. In the past, I aspired to become an actor, tried out for the one-act plays in high school, but always ended up backstage. I guess I was just too withdrawn to “perform”. With writing, I’m always more outgoing. I prefer email to in-person chats and texts to phone calls. I believe that’s because I can be who I want to be when I write. I can address the recipient with the candor and the confidence that speech does not allow me. The hermit side of me is cropping up here. I suppose it also has to do with lack of confidence in public speaking, always being afraid I’ll say the wrong thing. In writing, I don’t have to worry about that. I can revise it before it’s read. This allows me to be whomever I want, female, male, dog, cat, horse, and any age I want to be. It allows me to get on stage and become the character. Many reviewers comment on the strength of my characters. When a reader states, “I just wanted to wrap my arms around her…” to make the character’s life okay again, then I know I have done well with that character. She’s not just a part of my imagination, or part of some story; she has become real to the reader and made it into the outside world. How many times do we refer to actors by the names of their characters instead of their name? That character has become a part of our lives. That is the strength I have in writing, to make my characters a part of the reader’s life, to bring my characters to life.

Have you ever had writer’s block? If so, what do you do about it? Writer’s block? Absolutely! When I get writer’s block, it’s usually due to stress. I have so much going on in my life, so many aspects to keep up with, and so much work to do, that I sometimes become overwhelmed with it all. During these times, I find it difficult to focus on my work. The only way I can get back to work when writer’s block keeps me from it is to exercise. Exercise clears my mind, refocuses my breathing, relieves my stress, and allows me to think through problem areas. My favorite exercise is walking, because if have two big dogs, a Great Pyrenees named Reba who is a pound puppy, and a Heeler/ Mastif mix named Domino, who love to walk with me. They love walking so much, that on mornings when I walk back from the barn after feeding the cows and horses, Reba and Domino bounce up to me–even when it’s only 30 degrees like this morning– and expect to walk. Taking these mile and a half, brisk, nature walks help me the most. When it’s too cold, like this morning, then it’s Wii bowling, boxing or step aerobics. No matter the exercise, it always opens my mind back up and releases the characters within.

Can you share a little of your current work with us?Certainly, I will share a little of my current work. I love to give my readers a glimpse of what’s coming up. Here’s an excerpt, mind you this is a rough draft, of The Gifted Ones The Dream, which will be out in 2013. It’s the second book in my series, The Gifted Ones. I need to tell readers that this might be a bit graphic. It is a young adult series, though adults seem to appreciate it, also.

“Daddy! No!” the house glowed orange and yellow as the flames licked through the windows in an effort to reach the little girl on the lawn.

“No! Don’t think about it! That’s not your dad! Focus!” the voice of a girl filled Cheater’s mind, refocusing her eyes to the present.

Not her dad, but the faceless man stood before her, his iniquitous laugh filling her ears.

Flames danced and swayed inside the circle of the Gifted Ones, forcing each to tighten the grip they had on each other’s hands.

“It’s no, the present, that we need to focus on,” Jaz yelled over the billowing flames.

“Yes, if we don’t stop him, the world will suffer as we did!” Rebecca concentrated solely on the missing face.

“But we don’t know who he is! Look at his face!” Thad pointed out.

The whirlwind pulled at them, attempting to lift them from the ground and they fought to hold each other down.

“Wait! I know this place,” Nathan dared a glance over his shoulder,” I know where we are!”

“Remember it!” Cai ordered over the roar. “Try to see the others, too! We need to know who they are.”

Jas turned his head right, his eyes following the path from the hand he held, upward to the shoulder, and to the light hair of a girl. Squinting through the flames, he barely glimpsed her cheek before her face glowed orange with the hunting fire.

“Look!”

At the center of the circle, Mr. Johnston’s imposter stood with the man who tormented their dreams. Flames clawed at the imposter’s body, licking his face, singeing away his beard, tiny trails of orange traveling toward his chin. His screams overtook the roar of the fire as each of the Gifted Ones turned away opting to tighten heir handhold instead of cover their ears.

The gruesome screams grew to an unbearable level, and suddenly stopped. All eyes turned to the circle, the large man a crumple of smoldering flesh at its center.

“Defy me?” the evil voice roared into Cheater’s face, the breath of the dragon touching the tip of her nose. “And you also will burn, just like your family!”

“Leave her alone!” Jaz kicked at the tormentor without success.

“Keep your head! Stay focused! Don’t let him anger you; he will win!” Cai’s limbs trembled with control as her words reached Jaz’s ears.

Cheater’s feet lifted from the ground as the whirlwind wrapped its heated tentacles about her. Her hair rose and twisted with the wind. Jaz and Thad tightened the hold on her hands tugging her downward.

She had to let go of the past, of her family. She had to focus on the mission, the story, the ending. This was it. It was time to let go.

“Sarah! Sarah!” Outside the flames, as she spun to one side, Cheater’s mother called to her. “I’m here baby; I’m here and I will never leave you again. Come with me,” she held her hand out to Cheater.

“Mom!” Cheater struggled to let go of Thad’s hand, but he grasped hers tighter. “Let go! My mom’s here, right there.”

“Yes, Sarah, I’m here. Come home with me. Stevey’s waiting, so is Daddy. Come on,” the reaching arm closed the distance between Cheater’s body and her mother’s waiting hand.

“Mom,” Cheater smiled at the image over her shoulder, pulled her left hand free from Thad’s grip and reached behind her.

“No!” Thad yelled as her body rose further with the gusts twirling about her.

He jumped, catching a gust of hot hair to rise on, and grasped at her forearm, but his fingers barely grazed her skin.

How do you promote this book? Unfortunately, due to my busy schedule, I cannot promote my books the way I would like. Dead Perfect has been on blog tours; this tour is its second. I also advertise my website through Google and promote on Facebook and Twitter. I prefer not to spam people. I don’t pay any attention to spam, so I doubt they do, either. I like to talk to people through my blogs, too. I like to meet people, and my books give me the opportunity to do so. I also take my books to festivals. Dead Perfect has been to six festivals so far.

Will you write others in this same genre? I will absolutely write more books in the paranormal romance genre. I love that genre. In fact, I have an adult paranormal romance started. The title is Hog Island Love. I can’t wait to get back to work on it. Once I complete the rough draft of The Gifted Ones, The Dream, I will pick up where I left off with Hog Island. I also have another young adult paranormal romance in the works that has a unique plot and unusual characters. I want to get back to work on that one, too.

Is there a message in your novel that you want readers to grasp? I think the message I tried to convey in Dead Perfect is that love can happen to anyone, anywhere, and anytime. Love can span time and find a lost soul in any dimension, and that our only deterrents to finding true love are ourselves. What keeps us from having our dream love is what we hold within our hearts. In order to accept love, we must first let go and love ourselves.

How much of the book is realistic? Dead Perfect doesn’t have much realism in it. There are situations that could really happen, but as far as my life as it is in the book, there is very little realism. The mall trip, the first love, the first kiss, I suppose are events all people encounter. None of the events in the book actually happened to me, or anyone I know personally. The characters in Dead Perfect came to life while I wrote it, and have their own life, their own situations and experiences, although bits and pieces form from realistic situations and people, for instance, a phrase a character uses or reaction they have to certain people. The car accident at the beginning of the book did not happen to me; although, I have had two car accidents and know the reactions that take place as a person spins around within a car. Losing a loved one has happened to me. The conflict Mel feels about the loss of her mother stems from the conflict I felt when my father left us. So none of the book is realistic, but there are elements of realism within its pages. I think realism is important in order for all stories to reach the readers.

Have you included a lot of your life experiences, even friends, in the plot? Each of my books contains some of my life experiences. My book Moon Thief contains some family violence. Dead Perfect makes use of an alcoholic parent. The Gifted Ones series encompasses death of loved ones. Even the Bobby Jay series contain experiences stemming from my school life or teaching life. My characters are not based on any one friend or person, but a multitude of people. One of my characters may have one of my qualities, but look like two or three of my friends and my sister combined. All of the people I meet, the conversations I have, find their way into my memory, my creativity and extend themselves into my books in some way.

How important do you think villains are in a story? Villains are important for stories where they are necessary. Some stories don’t require a villain because the character deals with inner conflict. There may be a secondary character in the story who sways the main character one way or the other, but there isn’t a villain. In stories where the conflict is external, a villain is definitely necessary. Readers love to hate the bad person. They need someone to blame for the challenges that come upon the main character, and someone to be angry at when events don’t go the way they expect. Villains are great! My favorite approach to a villain is one that is not visible until the conflict climaxes. In the adult suspense novel I’ve been working on for about twelve years now, the villain has still not materialized, though her presence has definitely been established. It’s so much fun to write the part of a villain! I think that’s because of the balance of good and evil in every person.

What are your goals as a writer? My goals as a writer are many. First, I want to complete all of the books I have started. Second, I want to reach as many people as I can with my stories. I want to tell good stories, too. My main goal is to make writing my only career. I love to write more than life and nothing would make me happier than to channel all of my creativity and ideas into my books. I have shared knowledge, character and life with many students. I’ve affected them, and they have affected me. I’ve never wanted to win an award for teaching, but writing, I feel so differently about writing. Awards don’t really matter to me, but reaching my reader and maybe helping them in some way through the story I tell, that is what is important to me.

Do you have to travel much concerning your book(s)? I don’t have to travel much with my books, I get to travel! I love taking my books to book festivals, arts and crafts festivals, and to schools to visit teachers and students. I don’t have much time to travel, as a full time instructor, but I love to travel. My dream is to travel on book tours. That’s how I plan to spend my retirement days. I love meeting new people, seeing new places, and becoming the author in me. Most of the time, I prefer to be a hermit, but when it comes to my books, I love to get out in the world with them. I’m still waiting for the one book that will get me to that place of travel, and it will come. The more I write, the better the ideas get, and the better chance I have of achieving that dream.

Can we expect any more books from you in the future? Can you expect any more books from me? If I had to say no to that question, I would just give up now. I don’t write books just because I have always wanted to write ‘a book’. I have so many books in the making, so many ideas every day, that my books will not stop coming until I cease to exist. The next book on the list is the second book in The Gifted Ones series. After that, you should see a couple of paranormal romances, and then my suspense thriller. If I had all day to write, I could realize all four of these books this year, actually publishing the first one before the middle of the year, and another by the end of the year. I am a storyteller, and I don’t plan to stop telling stories any time soon. I didn’t start writing to become a one book, overnight success. I write for endurance and time. I want readers to read my books hundreds of years from now. Yes, you will be seeing many more books from me.

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Genre – Paranormal Romance

Connect with P.G. Shriver on Facebook & Twitter

Blog - http://pgshriver.blogspot.com/

Tuesday, January 22, 2013

#OBBigBang Orangeberry Big Bang - Sound Of A Voice That Is Still by PG Forte

 

OBBIGBANG

Updated on 28th December 2012

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>>>Giveaway

>>> Big Bang Limerick

What’s your favorite place in the entire world? California.  There are a lot of things I like about a lot of places within California, but it’s the whole place I love. My fictional town of Oberon, California is a distillation of all my favorite parts.

Do you recall how your interest in writing originated? I remember the first time I tried to “write” something. I was still too young to read or write, but I still recall spending an entire afternoon putting words to a song I heard on the radio, and repeating them over and over to myself until I had them memorized.

How long have you been writing? Forever. But I’ve been writing seriously/professionally for almost thirteen years now.

When did you first know you could be a writer? It was right after I’d finished my third book. I felt like the first was a longshot and the second was a fluke, but by the time I had number three under my belt, I began to believe that this was something I could keep doing indefinitely.

What genre are you most comfortable writing? Well, romance, obviously. But anything in the paranormal/fantasy/magical realm is where I feel most comfortable. I do wish I’d stop trying to write mysteries or stories featuring cops (unfortunately, I doubt I really will stop) because that’s hard for me, but I guess some part of me must like it.

What inspired you to write your first book? My kids—ironically enough. I’d stopped writing when my son was born—I felt I didn’t have the time for it. But then I realized they were growing up with no idea that I had always considered myself a writer. To me, it was a big part of who I am, but they’d never seen me do it, so…I sat down to write my first book in hopes that I’d come up with something that would show them who I was.

What made you want to be a writer? I don’t think anything makes you want to be a writer. I think you either are, or you’re not. Although, I suppose Jo in Little Women didn’t hurt either.

What do you consider the most challenging about writing a novel, or about writing in general? The beginning of anything is hard. It takes a while to get the momentum going. Endings can be hard as well—I never want to say good-bye to the people who’ve been living in my head for several months.

Have you ever had writer’s block? If so, what do you do about it? Yes. It sucks. Sometimes it’s a sign the book is veering off course somehow and if I go back and re-read what I have or try changing the perspective, I can shake loose whatever’s had me stuck. But other times, I don’t know what causes it and can only struggle along until I get past it. Horrible, horrible feeling. I hate it.

How did you come up with the title? It’s a line from a poem—Break, Break, Break by Tennyson. “Oh for the touch of a vanished hand and the sound of a voice that is still.” This is one of the books I think of as my “twins”. The other book is titled Touch of a Vanished Hand. The books are kind of mirror images of each other in a lot of ways. One’s set in winter, the other in summer; there’s a winemaker’s dinner in each book—one occurs a third of the way into the first book, the other occurs two-thirds of the way through the other; the heroines in each book are identical twins.

Can you tell us about your main character? The heroine of Sound of a Voice That is Still is Siobhan Quinn. Siobhan has been hurt in the past and hasn’t gotten over it. Growing up, she was considered the “good” twin. While she seems very practical and gentle and a little aloof, underneath she’s passionate and very, very strong. She’s one of my favorites.

What was the hardest part about writing this book? The villain. Ugh. Every time I’d write a scene in the villain’s POV I wanted to take a shower immediately afterwards. Very unpleasant person.

Will you write others in this same genre? Already have. This is the third book in the Oberon series. There are nine books total and a couple of novellas. I do plan on writing a few more books based on some of the same characters.

How much of the book is realistic? Have you included a lot of your life experiences, even friends, in the plot? Well, Siobhan’s nature center is very, very loosely based on one in Berkeley where I volunteered for almost ten years as a docent. And a lot of the locations are based on real places, but that’s probably it.

Can we expect any more books from you in the future? Absolutely! I have two books already scheduled to come out this year, as well as a short story in an anthology—also scheduled for this year.

What are your current writing projects now? I’m working on a new steampunk story that’s set in the same “world” as This Winter Heart, the fifth book in my Children of Night vampire series and a follow-up to Edge of Heaven, my angels-in-limbo book.

Do you have any advice for writers? Yes. Don’t worry about writing the best book in the world. Just write the best book that’s in you.

What do you do to unwind and relax? I read. Sometimes I go to the gym. Hot baths and wine also help. A few weeks ago I was really, really stressed out and had to get away so I spent the entire afternoon at the movie theater. Luckily, there were some exceptionally long movies playing, so I only had to buy two tickets to get a good six-hour vacation in.

Do you have any upcoming appearances that you would like to share with us? I’ll be attending the 2013 Romantic Times Booklovers Convention in Kansas City this year ( May first through fifth). I’ll be signing books at both book-signing events.

When you wish to end your career, stop writing, and look back on your life, what thoughts would you like to have? End? Stop? I don’t understand the question. I don’t plan on ever stopping.

Buy at Amazon

Genre – Supernatural Romantic Suspense (R)

Connect with P.G. Forte on Facebook & Twitter

Website - http://www.pgforte.com/

#OBBigBang Orangeberry Big Bang - A Blind Eye by John Henderson

OBBIGBANG

Updated on 28th December 2012

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>>>Giveaway

>>> Big Bang Limerick

A drawn out conflict between Inspector Simon Webster and Chief Inspector Damien Rose ultimately results in a career ending posting for Webster. Seeking retribution, Webster, with the support of his Sergeant, Noel Elliott, endeavours to undermine Rose’s credibility with the police hierarchy. Unfortunately things don’t go according to plan and, with Rose’s credibility already under investigation, Webster is drawn into a web of corruption, extortion, blackmail and conspiracy to murder. With the help of a police informant, Ron Lange, Webster draws on all his experience and skill to prevent bloodshed and put a stop to an endless round of corruption and blackmail.

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Genre – Police Procedural/Satire (G)

Connect with John Henderson on Twitter

Sunday, January 20, 2013

#OBBigBang Orangeberry Big Bang - Hot & Forbidden by PT Macias

 

OBBIGBANG

Updated on 28th December 2012

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>>>Amazon Listmania

>>>GoodReads Listopia

>>>Giveaway

>>> Big Bang Limerick

What inspired you to want to become a writer? I have always dreamed of writing since I was young. I didn’t start to write back then, because I didn’t have a typewriter. Yes, that’s when dinosaurs lived, lol.

It all began with a dream. I dreamed my story over and over again. I decided to write these novels after several weeks of dreaming about all of these characters.

I started brainstorming and organizing it into outlines. I developed each character’s personalities, interests, and personal love story.

I kept on track and was able to create cohesive plots by using a calendar as a timeline.  I want to write feasible and believable stories that evolve around events that are transpiring in each cousin’s life in the same period of time. I love writing and I’m extremely happy to be achieving my dream.

Tell us your most rewarding experience since being published. My most rewarding experience has been meeting all of these remarkable authors and readers.

What is your dream cast for your book? OMG, this every author’s dream, lol.

Jose Enrique De La Cruz          -  Eduardo Verastegui

Nicolas De La Cruz                   - William Levy

Ricardo De La Cruz                  -  Chris hemsworth

Alejandro Andres De la Cruz    - Francis Cura

Christian Arturo De La Cruz     – Gabriel Soto

Sebastian Antonio De La Cruz  – Aaron Diaz

Francisco Javier De La Cruz     – Chris evans

Is there a song you could list as the theme song for your book or any of your characters? Living La Vida Loca-Ricky Martin and The Way You Make Me Feel -Michael Jackson

What’s one piece of advice you would give aspiring authors? Go for it and give it your best. You will never know if you don’t try. You have to believe in yourself.

If you could choose only one time period and place to live, when and where would you live and why? England the Victorian period and  an aristocrat, lol. I would love to have met Queen Victoria, enjoy the balls, and this is also the same time period in America of the Wild West. The period is fascinating, hmmmm, maybe I will write a story in this time period, lol.

If you could be one of the Greek Gods, which would it be and why? Athena – because she’s the Greek virgin goddess of reason, intelligent activity, arts and literature. I feel it’s fitting that she’s the goddess of arts and literature.

If you could live anywhere in the world where would it be? Europe, California, or Mexico.

What is your favorite Quote? ”She rages through my blood, is etched in my alma, and fused to my corazon.” quote Ricardo Emanuel De La Cruz

When you were little, what did you want to be when you “grew up”? I always wanted to be a writer or an attorney.

How did you know you should become an author? When my new friends in my mind kept talking to me in my dreams and telling me their story.

Can you see yourself in any of your characters? A little in Patricia De la Cruz, lol.

What’s the craziest writing idea you’ve had? Well I have dreamt of some type of fairy and wizards story lines. I don’t know yet, but I have a vague story in my mind. Well, I did put the characters to sleep for now. I feel it is a little crazy idea.

What’s the best advice anyone has ever given you? You have to try to see if you can do it. You will never know if you don’t try.

Hidden talent? Writing, poetry

Favorite Food? I’m a very basic eater, I like pastas and chicken.

Favorite Candy? See’s Bordeaux Bar

What movie and/or book are you looking forward to this year? Oh yeah, the S. Kenyon series that I heard was underway.

What was your favorite children’s book? Nancy Drew.

How do you react to a bad review? I try to take it as a learning experience.

Give us a glimpse into a typical day in your day starting when you wake up till you lie down again. M-F I get up, go to my day job, and then get home have dinner. I then write. On weekends I do chores and then write.

What’s your favorite season/weather? Spring and Christmas

How did you celebrate the sale of your first book? Dinner with my family

What is your guilty pleasure? Ice cream

Favorite places to travel? Mexico and Disneyland

Favorite music? Country, Latin pop, and English pop.

Hot & Forbidden

A hot-blooded saga of the De La Cruz familia and their fortunes is centered on romance, pasión, and danger. Enjoy their explosively passionate nature.

In Hot & Forbidden, star-crossed lovers break the restraints of an impossible love. Their love rocks their world flinging them into pain, despair, and ecstasy.

Nicolas De La Cruz is hot, sensitive, and captivating. Daniella De La Cruz is hot, sexy and sweet. Nick and Daniella recognize that they’re alma gemela (soul mates). Their amor is intense and passionate transcending all boundaries.

Nicolas disappears to work in Washington. The familia is oblivious of the emotional roller coaster that rocks Nicolas’ world forcing him to depart.

Daniella is expecting and refuses to reveal who’s the father. The forbidden is enticing and painful. The obstacles and chains threaten their amor? The familia’s secret is the key to unlock their amor and to set it free. http://tiny.cc/nuh1lw

Buy now at Amazon

Genre - Romance Thriller (PG13)

Connect with PT Macias on Twitter

Blog http://ptmacias.blogspot.com/

Website http://ptmacias.com/

Orangeberry Book of the Day - The Dragon's Wing Enigma by NS Wikarski

THE ARKANA SERIES: Archaeological Thrillers That Defy History
Volume Three – The Dragon’s Wing Enigma

Think ”Medium meets Indiana Jones in The Lost Symbol.” (Kindle Nation Daily)

Runaway Bride

Cassie Forsythe’s checkered resume never included the job of babysitter. Former college freshman, yes. Amateur relic hunter, certainly. Seer for a secret organization, absolutely. But babysitter? Not likely! Cassie is packing for the next leg of a treasure hunt to recover a legendary artifact known as the Sage Stone when trouble comes knocking at her door. Trouble takes the form of fourteen year old runaway Hannah Curtis. Hannah isn’t your average teenager. She happens to be the youngest wife of aged polygamist Abraham Metcalf. Metcalf leads the religious cult known as the Blessed Nephilim and he covets the Sage Stone for himself.

Unwelcome Guest

Hannah’s untimely arrival creates a predicament for Cassie. The Nephilim isn’t supposed to know that anyone else is hunting the Sage Stone. More than that, the cult must never discover the existence of the Arkana – the secret society for which Cassie works. The Arkana has spent centuries recovering artifacts of ancient civilizations which predate patriarchy–advanced goddess-worshipping cultures on every continent. Their archaeological troves document the lost women’s history of the world and need to be protected at all costs. Unfortunately, Hannah could lead the cult straight to the Arkana’s underground cache of relics. Cassie contacts Faye, the Arkana’s elderly leader, for help. The old woman spirits the girl away to her farmhouse in the country. Faye promises to keep Hannah out of sight so that Cassie and her teammates can resume their quest.

Tricky Trinkets

Cassie, librarian Griffin, and bodyguard Erik face a daunting task. Five sequential artifacts reveal the hiding place of the Sage Stone. The treasure hunters must not only retrieve the relics before the Nephilim, they must also substitute forgeries in place of the real artifacts to keep the cult from discovering that it has competition. Luck has been on their side so far. They’ve recovered the first artifact with their foes none the wiser. The Arkana team flies to Malta, hoping to unearth the second artifact among the ruined temples of a long-dead civilization. After a fruitless search of the archipelago, their quest leads them northward into the Basque region of Europe. Meanwhile, Abraham’s son Daniel is combing the same terrain and narrowing the gap between them.

Dragon’s Wing Dilemma

In an isolated mountaintop cave, the treasure hunters learn that the next relic can only be discovered if they “keep true to the dragon’s wing.” The clue baffles them. What does it mean? Cassie and her friends are running out of time. With Nephilim operatives closing in, will they all survive this mission? Will the cult capture Hannah and breach the defenses of the Arkana itself? Follow the dragon’s wing to learn the answers.

Buy Now @ Amazon

Genre – Archaeology Thriller

Rating – PG13

More details about the author

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Saturday, January 19, 2013

#OBBigBang Orangeberry Big Bang - Tapped by Lynne Cantwell

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA

Updated on 28th December 2012

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>>>Amazon Listmania

>>>GoodReads Listopia

>>>Giveaway

Tell us a bit about your family. I’m the youngest of two children. My parents have both died – Dad in 1984 and Mom just a few years ago. They were both 42 when I was born, which was quite old for parents in the ‘50s. I’m divorced with two daughters, both in their 20s, one of whom is a prolific fanfiction writer.

What is your favorite quality about yourself? The older I get, the more confident I feel about my opinions, and about voicing them. I’m no longer as scared of offending someone when I speak my mind. I think that probably shows in my writing, too.

What is your least favorite quality about yourself? Probably my preference for all the foods that are bad for me!

What are you most proud of accomplishing so far in your life? I’m most proud of getting my books into print, and even selling some of them to people I’ve never met.

What is your favorite color? Turquoise in all its variants, running from the lightest to a teal blue.  Purple runs a close second.

What is your favorite food? Chocolate is the easy answer, but lately I’m leaning toward pizza.

What’s your favorite place in the entire world? Colorado, particularly Denver and the Rockies.

How has your upbringing influenced your writing? I think it encouraged me to stick it on the back burner for too many years. When I was younger, I wanted to be a musician, and my mother encouraged me to develop another career that would give me “something to fall back on.” That’s practical Mom advice, but it carries a subliminal message that creativity doesn’t pay – a message that I internalized to the point that I spent many, many years concentrating on making enough to live on and neglecting my creative side.

Do you recall how your interest in writing originated? Sure. The kid who sat in front of me in second grade brought in a “book” he’d written and illustrated. I thought to myself, “I could do that.” So I did.

How long have you been writing? I wrote all throughout grade school, high school and college. I stopped writing fiction when my daughters were young and while I got my journalism career off the ground. I picked it up again when I went to grad school, and then put it away for several years after the divorce. I started writing seriously again in 2008.

When did you first know you could be a writer? When I was still in grade school, my mom got me an appointment with a guy who turned out to be a representative of a vanity publisher. He didn’t accept any of my work for publication (a blessing, in hindsight), but he told me to keep writing.

What genre are you most comfortable writing? I feel most at home when writing fantasy, probably because that’s what I tend to read for fun. I tried writing straight contemporary fiction when I was in grad school but the stories all seemed blah to me – no magic!

What inspired you to write your first book? My very first book was a piece of juvenilia inspired by the Nancy Drew mysteries. Trust me, you don’t want to read it.

What made you want to be a writer? You know how sometimes when you’re reading a terrific book, you get all caught up in it, feeling everything the characters feel? And then you look up and realize how much time has passed? Writers are the people who get you to that place. We get to feel that intensity for the first time, while we’re creating the story. Who wouldn’t want to do that for a living?

What do you consider the most challenging about writing a novel, or about writing in general? Finding the time. And as a corollary, explaining to friends and family that you’re unavailable because you’re writing.

Did writing this book teach you anything and what was it? For Tapped, I did a lot of research on the Lakota and on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation. I also had to piece together what a Wolf Dreamer was, and his significance to the tribe.

Do you intend to make writing a career? Yes, the gods willing!

Have you developed a specific writing style? All those years in radio news have made me a very lean writer. I shy away from adjectives and adverbs, and my sentences are rarely complex. The Pipe Woman Chronicles seem to lend themselves to this “just the facts, ma’am” style; the first book in the series, Seized, practically wrote itself.

Have you ever had writer’s block? If so, what do you do about it? All those years as a journalist have beaten writer’s block out of me. Give me a deadline and I’ll write you what you need.

How did you come up with the title? Seized was pretty easy. It suggests both the way White Buffalo Calf Pipe Woman chose the main character, Naomi, and also the way Naomi’s life has been altered by the goddess’s intervention. I wanted the rest of the Pipe Woman Chronicles’ titles to be similar, and so I’ve had to spend varying amounts of time with the thesaurus. Tapped gave me quite a bit of trouble, but in the end I settled on it because of its double meaning in relation to the plot: Naomi goes to the taproot of one-half of her heritage, and the villain taps into a major aquifer to wreak his havoc.

Can you tell us about your main character? Naomi Witherspoon grew up working-class poor in Indiana, the only child of a single mother. Naomi went to law school in Denver, and stayed in Colorado afterward. When the series opens, she’s working as a mediator at a major regional law firm and newly engaged to a fellow attorney. Then White Buffalo Calf Pipe Woman contacts her, telling her that She wants Naomi to mediate peace in heaven between Jehovah and the pagan pantheons. After that, her whole life turns upside down. Among the things she discovers is that her father, whom she’s never met, is a Lakota Indian. In Tapped, she and her best friend Shannon go to the reservation to try to find him. Needless to say, Naomi learns as much about herself on this trip as she does about dear old dad.

Who designed the cover? I did. I found the fractal owl that became the artwork for Seizedon a stock photography site, along with a fractal wolf that I doctored somewhat for the cover of Tapped, and a photo that will be the cover of book 5. I found a utility for GIMP that did the same sort of thing to regular photos, which is how I created the artwork for the covers ofFissured and book 4. This from a woman who got a C in eighth grade art class.

Will you write others in this same genre? An excellent question. The first draft of book 4 is done and I intend to write book 5 this spring, with both of them out by June first, the gods willing. I’m deliberately not thinking about what I’ll tackle after that. But I’ve enjoyed writing this series so far, so yes, I’ll probably write more urban fantasy.

How much of the book is realistic? Hmm. Define “realistic.” The locations are certainly real, and I like to think the characters’ feelings and relationships with one another ring true.  As to whether the gods are real….

Have you included a lot of your life experiences, even friends, in the plot? I think it’s fairer to say that my life experiences have informed the plot.  I know a little bit about a lot of the things that happen in the Pipe Woman Chronicles.  But I haven’t modeled any of the characters after anybody I know, if that’s what you’re asking.

Have you started another book yet? Yup! The first draft of book four, Gravid, is done, and I intend to begin editing it this month.

Where do you see yourself in five years? I like to say that I’m on the seven-year plan. I’ll be 62 and eligible for early retirement in 2019 (go ahead and do the math, I don’t care). I plan to stay in my current job until then, or until my writing income matches the income from my day job, whichever comes first.

What contributes to making a writer successful? Being realistic about your chances for making a living at it – and sticking with it anyway. And too, being attentive to your own definition of success. If you define success as making buckets of money the easy way, by sitting on your butt all day and making stuff up, you’re going to be disappointed.

Do you have any specific last thoughts that you want to say to your readers? Thanks for coming along for the ride! I hope you’ll enjoy the rest of the trip.

When you wish to end your career, stop writing, and look back on your life, what thoughts would you like to have? I’d like to think that I’ll be satisfied with what I’ve accomplished, that I’ve been true to my beliefs with my work – and yet unsatisfied that I couldn’t have written just one more book.

Buy at Amazon

Genre – Urban Fantasy (PG13)

Connect with Lynne Cantwell on Facebook & Twitter

Blog - http://hearth-myth.blogspot.com/