Tuesday, March 8, 2011

RNA Pure Passion Awards - The Pics

In the glamorous setting of the Gladstone Library, One Whitehall Place the attendees sipped champange and enjoyed a wonderful afternoon into evening...(apologies for the funny layout - blogger and jet lag don't seem to work together)

Broo Doherty and Evelyn Ryle
Short listed author Sarah Duncan
Judy Astley and Lyn McCulloch
Short listed author Jan Jones
Liz Fenwick and Penny Jordan
Julie Cohen and Karin Stoecker

Tim Bentinck (alias David Archer) and Jane Wenham-Jones
Katie Fforde
The Gladstone Library
Enjoying the atmosphere before the announcements
Awaiting the start
Penny Jordan receiving a lifetime achievement award
Tim and Jane
Louise Allen receiving the Love Story of the Year Award
Elizabeth Chadwick receiving the Historical Novel Award
Jill Mansell reeiving the Romantic Comedy award
Josephine Cox receiving a lifetime achievement award
JoJo Moyes receiving Romantic Novel of the Year award
Penny Jordan with her award and friends
The Flaming Meringues 
Roger Sanderson congratulating Josephine Cox
Sue Morrcroft
Bring on the pudding
The table of short listed author Tom Gamble
Sophie Kinsella and JoJo Moyes
Jane Judd and Jill Mansell
Broo Doherty and short listed author Christina Jones
Elizabeth Chadwick with her award
Liz Fenwick and Carole Blake
Louise Allen
Short listed author Ruth Saberton (centre)
Julie Cohen and Cat Cobain
The portrait that watched over the event
JoJo with fabulous handbag and shoes
Enjoying the champagne
Jill's gorgeous handbag
The Churchill Bar
Short listed author Christina Courtenay
The fireplace in the ladies loo
Carole Blake's purple suede shoes
The amazing free standing staircase

Friday, March 4, 2011

Author Interview with Lynne Connolly

Today we have one of the new breed of writers, Lynne Connolly, who writes for epublishers, which doesn’t necessarily mean her titles only appear as ebooks. In many cases you can choose to buy print if you wish. So tell us Lynne, how did you get started?
I’ve been writing pretty much all my life, but I only decided to go for publication ten years ago. I was published two years after that, with Yorkshire, the first Richard and Rose book.

To plot or not to plot? How much of a planner are you?
Both formal and informal. I used to do detailed description of each scene, using the Donald Maass workbook, but I think as you write more, you get more confident. Now I work from a synopsis, usually a couple of pages, describing the main turning points of the book.

However I do a lot of staring into space and I have a lot of baths, when I’m working out plot knots and most importantly, getting to know my characters. Romance is all about character and how they cope with the situations you cast in their way, so they must be at the core of everything. I’d rather alter a plot to suit a character than the other way around.

What do you think an editor is looking for in a good novel?
Something different. Or rather, the same but different. They want something that stands out, but they want something they can sell. So if you write romance, they want a story about a developing relationship with a happy ending. That’s not a formula, because so much else goes on, it’s a requirement.

I was going to say they want believable situations, but that’s not always true. I’ve read any number of historicals recently where the plot just wouldn’t work. But they do want believable characters. Not perfect ones - it’s boring to read about perfection - but characters struggling through to win and be with each other. I think an editor knows what she doesn’t want, but she doesn’t really know what she wants until she reads it.


Where is your favourite place to work?
I work in the living room. I sit on the sofa, with the TV or stereo on, and I work. That started when I was a little grammar school girl who had to do her (copious) homework in the living room because in those days that and the kitchen were the only warm rooms in the house! Now I can’t work well in silence. So I use libraries for research but I like noise when I write!
My pc is very quiet, and sits next to the sofa, and my screen, mouse and keyboard are on a little laptop table.

Do you write every day? What is your work schedule?
No, I don’t write every day, but I work every day. Sometimes it’s promotion day, and sometimes it’s blog writing day. Or plotting day.

Which authors have most influenced your work?
I don’t know. Honestly. I can tell you the authors I love, and I grew up loving, but I write what’s in my head. I write mid-Georgian set romances, and one of my series features the same couple throughout, and is written in the first person. I don’t know where Richard came from, much less Rose.

What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
The start of the day. I get that fear that I can’t do it, that I’ve lost it, and I do a lot of procrastination before I start. And galleys. I force myself to go through them, but at that stage, I hate it all and I don’t know why I ever thought such rubbish was any good (that feeling does pass rather quickly, thankfully!)

How do you promote your books?
Any way I can. I do a lot of blogging, because it works for me. I dislike doing "Buy my book" promotions, other than the first time, to let people know there’s a book around. But repeating it doesn’t work for me, particularly online. So I review, write columns and essays and spread my name as a "brand" rather than a particular book.

I also fly across the Atlantic every year for Romantic Times Convention. It costs a fair bit, but it’s wonderful. I do research for the next book, since many of my books are set in the States, and I put myself about a lot. Romantic Times is like nothing this side of the Atlantic. It’s a huge convention, with around 350 authors and 1500 readers and there are two big book signings. I take lots of promo stuff - postcards, little gifts with my name on, other goodies - and attend all the functions, including the three big balls. A lot of business is done at the convention. I’ve finalised two contracts there, for different publishers, and discussed a new series. I honestly think I wouldn’t have got on like I have without going there. And I’ve met some lovely people. It means readers can put a face to the name, and of course I have the "quaint" English accent!

I write columns and reviews for several blogs, including Erotic Readers and Writers Association, The Raven Cafe, UK Regency and The Good The Bad and The Unread. I also have my own blog, but you’re more likely to find me here:
http://goodbadandunread.com/

Do you have interests other than writing?
I do miniatures. Doll’s houses and their contents and their dolls. If you hunt on my website, you’ll find lots of pictures of my houses and the dolls I make. In fact, when I started, it was either make dolls for sale, and keep writing as a hobby, or the other way about. I chose the other way. If you think you can’t make a living, check out the websites of Jill Bennett and James Carrington. Jamie’s dolls are exquisite. A double sculpture of Oberon and Titania went on sale for $1000. Underpriced, if you ask me.

What advice would you give a new writer?
First and foremost - don’t give up. The only writer who will definitely not get published is the one who never queries a publisher or agent. And don’t obsess about the market. Write the book you want to, then look around for the market. Decide what you will compromise on to make your story marketable, and what you won’t. Value yourself. It’s so easy to get beaten down in this market. You finished a book! How many people can say that?

And join the RNA. Seriously, do it. I’ve had so much encouragement and cameradierie from the members, I don’t think I would have got this far without them.

Tell us about your latest book, and how you got the idea for it.
There are two, so I’ll tell you about the paranormal romance. Paranormal is a huge sector in the States, and with the success of Twilight and Harry Potter, set to carry on that way. My latest, due out on 8th March is Griffin’s Treasure. I write about a secret department attached to the CIA and MI6, called Department 57, because I’ve seen that the most dangerous departments have the most mundane names! My paranormal beings are called Talents - I have vampires, shape-shifters (all mythical beasts), and anthropomorphids (anthros) like mermen and suchlike. It’s James Bond with fang and claw!

In this one, the hero Josh, a British football player for Manchester Dons, goes to San Francisco to hunt for his brother Laurie, who has been kidnapped by scientists so they can experiment on him. He finds Chana, an ex cop, who has a secret even she doesn’t know about. Helping Chana come to terms with her secret and finding his brother, together with falling deeply in love for the first time in his life sends Josh into a spin.

Griffin’s Treasure was published before and won the 2004 EPPIE for Paranormal Romance, but this version is heavily rewritten. It was really interesting to revisit the book, and it showed me just how much I’ve changed my writing style even in 6 years.

You can read an extract and more details on my website: http://lynneconnolly.com/GriffinsTreasure.html

Can you tell us something of your work in progress?

I’m writing the next and, for now, the last Richard and Rose. I really don’t want to say goodbye to this couple, and they will reappear in cameo roles in future books. Try to keep Richard out! The newest episode in their lives, Maiden Lane, comes out on the 15th March.

What I originally planned was a quiet man in the lower ranks of the aristocracy who would solve country house murders with his unassuming wife. What I got was Richard Kerre, Viscount Strang, dandy, leader of fashion and heir to one of the richest titles in the country. I didn’t plan him that way. He just arrives. Master at swordsmanship, he’s not afraid to wear pink silk and lace, and yet he’s all man. This adventure sees him and his beloved wife Rose back in London, trying to survive a joint attack by both their principal enemies. This time someone has to die, because there’s no chance of a standoff.

It’s very hard saying goodbye to my couple, and they are suffering in this last book, poor things! But it is a romance, and remember what I said earlier!

I write for Ellora’s Cave, Samhain Publishing, Loose-Id Publishing, Total E-bound, Champagne Publishing, Awe-Struck Books, and Uncial Press.

That’s brilliant, Lynne. And my final question is: You seem to be remarkably prolific and have several publishers, would you share with us how many books a year you write?
I suppose I write 4 full lengths a year and a couple of novellas. Full lengths are usually around 80,000, and novellas maybe half that. Sometimes it’s harder to write the short ones because you need to get all that depth of character in a smaller space!

Thank you Lynne, that was fascinating. You can find out more by visiting her website.
http://lynneconnolly.com

Interviews on the RNA Blog are conducted by Freda Lightfoot and Kate Jackson. If you would like an interview, please contact me at: mailto:freda@fredalightfoot.co.uk

Tuesday, March 1, 2011

March Releases


Christina Courtenay THE SCARLET KIMONO
Choc Lit 
1st March 2011
7.99 or less. Also available in various e-book formats.
Abducted by a Samurai warlord in 17th-century Japan – what happens when fear turns to love?













Elizabeth Chadwick TO DEFY A KING
Sourcebooks (USA)
1st March 2011
14.99 or less. Also available in various e-book formats.
 Set in the early 13th century; Mahelt, eldest daughter of the great William Marshal struggles to deal with her arranged marriage as King John turns upon her family.

UK version shortlisted for the RNA main award and
Best Historical Award.

Details including extract here: http://www.elizabethchadwick.com/Books/tdak.html





Anna Jacobs  DESTINY’S PATH
Hodder & Stoughton
Hardback 19.99
The twins are torn. One wants to travel, the other to stay in the colony. But travel isn’t easy for a woman alone, and it’s a long journey via Gall, Suez, Alexandria before the Suez Canal.
Book 3 of The Swan River Saga, 1860s.











Severn House
Paperback 11.99
 When Meriel emigrates to Australia, she gets a sudden chance to make her childhood dreams come true, she finds herself also tangled in Ben’s dreams - and his problems too, but she’s a very determined woman.













Dilly Court A MOTHER'S SECRET
Arrow
3 March 2011
Paperback £5.99
Belinda's passonate love affair with a handsome Anglo-Indian
army officer ends in tragedy when he is killed in action on the
North West Frontier.


Fenella Miller A CORNISH MAID
Aurora Regency Aspen Mountain Press
March 3rd 2011
ebook
$2.99
A Regency romance set in Cornwall.







Sophie Page TO MARRY A PRINCE
Arrow
31st March 2011
Paperback £5.99
 Ordinary girl Bella falls in love with heir to the British
throne, but this is not Britain as we know it.












Jo Beverley AN UNLIKELY COUNTESS
Penguin/NAL New York
March 1st
6.99 print, 4.69 Kindle.
A Prudence who isn't prudent, and a Cate who isn't at all
effeminate end up in an unlikely marriage in 18th century England.












Julie Cohen GETTING AWAY WITH IT
Headline Review
17 March 2011
Paperback £6.99
 Stunt woman Liza Haven returns to the small village she couldn't wait to escape, only to find that her perfect identical twin sister Lee has disappeared...and the whole village thinks that Liza is Lee.











June Francis IT HAD TO BE YOU
Allison & Busby
Hardback £19.99
1952. Following her grandfather's sudden death, orphan Emma Booth thinks she’s alone in the world, but then discovers she has a half-sister in Liverpool.












Orion
March 17
Hardback £9.99

Secret Shoppers Sandie, Emily and Grazia thought they'd be friends forever, but they reckoned without the dividing effects of men and money...










Lynne Connolly GRIFFIN'S TREASURE
Loose-Id llc
8th March 2011
$5.99
A British soccer star is also a griffin - can San Francisco cop Chana reveal her deepest secrets to him?

Extract:









Lynne Connolly MAIDEN LANE (Richard and Rose book 7)
Samhain Publishing
15th March 2011
$5.50
 Life is cheap-so is death

Extract:

Publisher page:







Mary Nichols SIR ASHLEY'S METTLESOME MATCH
Mills and Boon
Hardback £13.99
March 2011
Determined to bring a notorious smuggling operation to justice,
Sir Ashley Saunders clashes with feisty Pippa Kingslake who seems
to know more about them than she will admit.
(No 4 in the Piccadilly Gentleman's Club series)










Portia Da Costa FAR FROM PERFECT
Samhain Publishing
1st March 2011
$4.50/£2.62
Enduring passion, turbulent emotions, and an engagement of convenience… Sparks fly when Anna and Nick are reunited four years after they first slept together.



Sally Clements BOUND TO LOVE
Embrace Books launch title
14/2/2011
ebook
Security expert Jake Forrester must accept the help of impulsive, spirited goldsmith Tempest MacKenzie when they find themselves kidnapped together, despite his misgivings! 








Sylvia Broady THE YEARNING HEART
Robert Hale
Hardback £18.99

A mother’s quest to be reunited with her twins who were
separated at birth. Will Frances succeed?












Talli Roland  THE HATING GAME
Prospera Publishing
9th March 2011
Paperback £7.99
 For Mattie Johns, reality TV just got a little too real.












Wendy Soliman OF DUKES AND DECEPTIONS
Carina Press
14th March 2011
$4.49
 Regency romp in which a haughty duke more than meets his
match in a humble poor relation.











Large Print and Audio

Beth Elliott APRIL AND MAY
Ulverscroft
£16:99
 In Constantinople, 1804, Rose Charteris is forced to work on a secret plan for the Sultan with Tom Hawkesleigh, who broke her heart four years earlier.












Chrissie Loveday WHERE THE HEART IS
Ulverscroft
March 1st
£8.99 
Wealthy Lissa takes a housekeeper's job to prove to her father that she can do it but her boss, the gorgeous Dom sees her other talents.












Gwen Kirkwood HEART OF THE HOME
Audio book produced by Soundings
Read by Lesley Mackie
 Avril Gray sacrifices a good career to keep her promise and care for her young brothers, but she is afraid no man will want to share such responsibility.
Third in the "Home" series -(1940 to 1967)


Margaret Mounsdon HOLD ME CLOSE
Thorpe Large Print
1 March 2011
£8.00
Resting actress Sara Armitage is offered the job of looking after her old flame Lyle Jackson’s young daughter. Sparks fly from the off.



Kate Walker THE PROUD WIFE
Harlequin Mills & Boon Modern Romance
March 4th
£3.30
He says he wants his freedom - he's summoned her to Sicily for just that reason. But with his wife standing before him, about to sign on the dotted line of their divorce papers, Pietro wonders why he ever let her go.













Novellas

Kate Jackson  SECOND CHANCE
A People's Friend Pocket Novel No 674
10 March 2011
£1.80

When Laura returns to Orkney to visit her beloved grandmother
she finds that memories can still break your heart.


Short Stories

Janet Gover ON THE ROAD EAST
Short Story:
100 Stories for Queensland : a charity anthology to raise money
for flood victims.
March 8th
Price : t.b.c.
The road east leads to bright lights and adventure... but is it the best road to take?



Susannah Jacobs  A WEEKEND IN PARIS
Short story
People's Friend Fiction Special
17th Feb - 9th March
£1.99
 Paris, the city of romance, works its magic and gives Susanna  a chance to find love again.

Elspeth Hart THE ICING ON THE CAKE
Short story
People's Friend Fiction Special
17th Feb - 9th March
£1.99
There are cakes for all reasons while a family waits for  the birth of a baby. 

Elspeth Hart BACK TO NATURE
Short story
People's Friend Fiction Special
17th Feb - 9th March
£1.99
Sam uses his passion for nature to help his father.


Non-fiction


Anna Jacobs PLOTTING AND EDITING - polishing tips for writers, revised edition
ebook-First UK edition at Amazon Kindle

With over 50 novels published, Anna Jacobs has a lot of ideas
to share with other writers.