Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Interview with thriller author K.P. Kollenborn

I’m featuring thriller author K.P. Kollenborn today. She’s on a multiweek virtual book tour for her new novel, How the Water Falls with Goddess Fish Promotions.

During her tour, K.P. will be awarding a print copy of the book to a randomly drawn winner. To be entered for a chance to win, use the form below. To increase your chances of winning, feel free to visit her other tour stops and enter there, too!
  
Welcome, K.P. Please tell us a little bit about yourself.
Although I've been writing since childhood, I have a BA in history. I love studying history as much as wanting to evoke stories. I like to believe that after decades worth of introspection we have learned to value our lessons, and the best way to recite our lessons are through storytelling. That's why I love history: To learn. To question. To redeem our humanity. Submitting to a moment in time allows us to remember, or to muse even, our society's past. 

Although writing can educate as well as entertain, yet what makes art incredibly amazing, to that of paintings, photographs, and music, it transposes emotion into another form of humanity, and therefore, it is our humanity which keeps all of us striving for an improved future. I am fortunate to have been trained by one the top ten writing teachers in the US, the late Leonard Bishop, and author of Dare to be a Great Writer. I owe my love of writing to him. In addition to writing, I draw, paint, create graphic design, and am an amateur photographer.

Please tell us about your current release.
On the fringes of a civil war arise a kaleidoscope of stories of abuse, power, betrayal, sex, love, and absolution, all united by the failings of a dying government. Set in the backdrop during the last years of South Africa’s apartheid, How the Water Falls is a psychological thriller that unfolds the truth and deception of the system’s victims, perpetrators, and unlikely heroes. 

The two main characters, one white, Joanne– a reporter, the other black, Lena– a banned activist, have their lives continuously overlap through the people they know during a thirteen-year period and eventually become friends as a result of their interviews together. 

Joanne personifies the need to question and investigate apartheid’s corruption from a white person’s perspective. Although her intentions begin with idealism, no matter how naïve, as the years pass while the system is failing, she crosses the threshold of what it means to be caught up inside the belly of the beast, especially after crossing paths with the Borghost brothers. 

Lena, who is inspired by her predecessors, such as Steve Biko and Nelson Mandela, is among the minority of black women to peacefully battle for equality, even if her struggle is indicative of sacrificing her health and safety. 

Hans Borghost is Johannesburg’s commissioner of police who, like all those before, had a military background before pursuing a law enforcement career. Violent, manipulative, and controlling, he incarnates the image of South Africa’s perpetrators. 

Jared Borghost is the younger brother of Hans and, like his brother, has a military background, but unlike Hans, he internally combats between his sense of duty and morality. His inconsistency indicates a conscience that leaves one to ponder whether Jared is either a perpetrator, victim, or both. As his surname suggests, Bor-GHOST represents the “ghosts” that haunt the family’s past. 

Many other characters play the roles of spies, freedom fighters, lovers, adversaries, and supporters. This novel is as complex as apartheid was itself, unlacing fabrics of each character’s life to merge into a catalyst downfall. The question of who will survive this downfall will suffice in the courts of truth and reconciliation and whether love is strong enough to preserve peace.

What inspired you to write this book?
The ideas for How the Water Falls were inspired by real people and real events. If a person is to become socially conscious as a means to understand the world around oneself, then exploring the past is a good way to start. For me, it began with the movie Cry Freedom, which was based on the friendship between Donald Woods and Steve Bike. The inhumanity shown in the movie left me horrified and emotionally displaced. I was only fourteen. 

Then, years later, I came across a documentary, the name I don't remember because I missed the beginning, about a white South African couple who had nothing in common. The wife was a liberal reporter, and the husband was a former army personnel and police officer who had been fired as a scapegoat for apartheid's problems. They struggled with understanding each other's past. 

The other inspirations came from the book Kaffir Boy and A Human Being Died That Night: A South African Woman Confronts the Legacy of Apartheid. In dealing with how to come to terms with violence and poverty, these two books opened up a world history books didn't touch. 

And in correlation to my title, I wish to have a symbolic connection to the meaning of my stories. How the Water Falls is meant to represent the ideology of power and corruption through the structure of waterfalls, and how a system can fall by the pressure of united power. One of my characters, Lena, explains it all at the ending of the book.

Excerpt:
Colonel Hans Borghost, a man in his early forties, rested his coffee mug on his desk. His rectangular name tag was displayed prominently, broadcasting his distinction as Commissioner of Police. He bore a hefty gut, a sign of indulgence and importance, as well as silver streaks above his ears. His blazing blue eyes were the dominating feature of the Borghost clan. All three brothers had inherited their father’s strongest physical features which made their mother feel even more inferior, may God rest her restless soul.

Flipping a folder open as he sat down, he coughed while scrutinizing a handful of photos and then carefully read the first page. A Bantu woman by the name of Lena Skosana was brought in yesterday afternoon for not having her passbook in order. It was not long before they found out she was a banned kaffir; her status forbade her to leave Alexandra for five years, but she did anyway, claiming she needed to make an important trip into Jo’burg. She was a repeat offender, having already served time for illegal activity writing blasphemes that condemned their sacred laws. Another militant kaffir who threatened civil concordance. It was an endless campaign with these people. He studied her small photos. Her youth undoubtedly opposed wisdom. Probably someone who hadn’t yet left her twenties, he guessed. Sighing, he presumed her stupidity was chronic, and the only true cure for that was to treat her like a wild horse.

Sipping his coffee, Hans closed the folder and stood up. He peeked at his wristwatch, and proceeded to walk out of his office, down the hall into the interrogation room. Closing the door, still holding his mug, a mixture of sweat and urine lagged in the shallow room. Two other white officers were present: one sitting behind a table, the other standing with a cigarette in his mouth. Both were cross-examining the Bantu woman, who was tied to a chair. Both revealed exhaustion under their eyes; sloppiness through unbuttoned collars and rolled-up sleeves. The officer smoking a cigarette had blood spots on his shirt. He was young with a crew cut and gray eyes.

Hans wasn’t surprised to find the kaffir’s face cut and bruised. One of her eyes was swollen shut. He noticed cigarette burns on her arms and legs. Her clothes were damp and he could smell her urine. Rarely did his men beat on a woman unless she retaliated like a man. Some of these women did. Some of these pagan women were nearly as strong as a man. In that case, it was justifiable. He sipped his coffee while he walked around her. She was moaning and crying.

It had been a long night for all of them. Hans allowed his men to take care of the situation, trusting them enough to perform their jobs with little misunderstanding. They weren’t new to the system and had served their two years in the military. Already primed for war; already experienced. Insurgent bombings were a monthly activity in South Africa, and had been so for two decades. This unconventional war sadly required unconventional tactics. Then he stopped. Hans stared at her skirt crinkled to her thigh. Her undergarment was ripped and discarded by her feet.

Alarmed, he looked at each of his men. “Did either of you take advantage of this prisoner?” he demanded in Afrikaans. The two glanced at each other, but remained silent. Grimacing, Hans continued, “What have I said about this sort of thing? Do what you have to get your point across, but do not gamble your health with these meids! Most often they are infected! How could either of you be so damn careless?

She was a virgin, sir,” the one sitting behind the table replied.

What if she wasn’t?” Hans snapped. “At her age, I’m greatly surprised she still was a bloody virgin.” Shaking his head, he bitterly scolded, “I will not have my precinct run like a brothel! Jisus, man, be professional about interrogating a prisoner!” He glanced at the woman, partially disgusted. Again shaking his head, he grunted just before he slammed the door and ordered, “Clean her up!


What exciting story are you working on next?
I’m working on two projects: One is is Pictorial Ballad which deals with the relationship between the American military and Lakota Sioux during the 1870’s. I hope to have this project completed by fall of 2015. My other Pictorial Ballad, Two Dairy Goats’ Journey, has already been published as a children’s book. You can learn more about this here. My other project is a historical fiction about a female cross-dresser who ponders on themes such as identity, sexuality, and race during the Victorian era. I have no idea when to complete this project! Perhaps in a couple of years.

When did you first consider yourself a writer?
It was a gradual evolution. Initially I wanted to be an artist- mainly focusing on drawing and painting, and I do have a graphics art degree. Because I’m dyslexic, reading and writing came to me slowly as a child, and I somehow compensated by memorizing the structure of words. I used to tell stories to my sisters as children, but later in school, when I felt forced to write stories as part of our English and grammar training, teachers would compliment my story-lines. I began to have awareness that not only I could create something in which people liked. And I kinda liked it, too. The biggest influence in school was my 8th grade English teacher who read four of my stories out loud to the class. That was the same year I wanted to write about the Japanese-American experiences. Up until I was a teenager, I didn’t believe I had any other talent. After college, I was very lucky in finding a mentor, Leonard Bishop, who had taught writing at Columbia and Berkeley. (I should be thankful he married a Kansas gal which was the reason he would even live in Kansas!) It has taken me some time to find courage to pursue a writer’s career.

Do you write full-time? If so, what's your work day like? If not, what do you do other than write and how do you find time to write?
Part-time because I’m a full-time stay-at-home mom. I reserve the time for writing in the mornings before I fulfill other family and household obligations!

What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
First I let ideas fester in my subconscious and when I'm ready to commit to writing, I begin researching about the time period and culture, and once I acquire enough information to get started, I begin writing incomplete scenes to see which part of the story feels right. It often starts out like puzzle pieces where I just pick out pieces and lay down a basic foundation until I start seeing who the story falls together. I don't work with outlines; too restrictive. I only come up with who the people are, their backgrounds, and how they interact with each other. The historical references come into play according to their personality type.

As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?
As I’ve mentioned before, I had wanted to be an artist and I do continue to draw, but then I had thought about becoming a teacher- but realized I have little patience, then a veterinarian- but realized blood makes me queasy, and at one point, a civil rights lawyer- but realized I’m too shy to debate in front of people.

Anything additional you want to share with the readers?
I like mixing realism with symbolism. I love stories that deal with struggle for freedom, searching for identity and purpose, and have some sort of message that forces you to contemplate. I aspire to preserve realism as much as possible to uphold the integrity of history. Many of the characters are inspired by a mesh of real people of that time period as well as using several historical events as part of the plot.


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Monday, January 12, 2015

Interview with young adult/fantasy author Kris Noel

Today’s feature is young adult/fantasy novel Lionhead by Kris Noel.

Welcome, Kris. Please tell us a little bit about yourself.
I’m 27. I was born and raised in New Jersey, but I’m now living in Burbank, California. I went to Montclair State University, where I majored in Anthropology and minored in Film. I’m currently working on the sequel to Lionhead, Requiem, which should be released later this year.

Please tell us about your current release, Lionhead.
Thirteen-year-old Riley Bale has always been a monster. At least that’s how all the other kids have always treated her. After being plagued with a mysterious illness for much of her young life and living as an orphan with her two cold and distant older sisters, Riley has dealt with being bullied by becoming a bully herself.

During a violent after school attack, Riley learns she’s being protected by forces beyond her control. She is tested and then invited to attend Lionhead Shifter School, which she accepts on blind faith alone, along with the desire to understand where her parents came from before they disappeared. Once Riley arrives in Lionhead, she not only discovers her true identity as a shifter, but appears to fit right in with the other new kids.

Riley quickly realizes that everything is not quite what it seems. Amidst an unusual hatred that arises between the two teenage boys she’s become closest with, Oliver Preston and Ash Plum, she must learn why the small island community has previously disallowed outsiders for over a hundred years.

Lionhead’s sequel, Requiem, is being released later this year, which will continue to follow Riley’s journey.

What inspired you to write this book?
I was highly influenced by science fiction and fantasy novels growing up, so I really wanted to try to recreate that feeling. I wanted to write a strong female character, which I think Riley Bale is. I loved writing this story and I wanted to write for a young audience.

What exciting story are you working on next?
Right now I just finished up a new YA/Sci-fi novel called Never World. It’s basically about a young girl, Tess, who gets caught up in a virtual reality gameshow run by a mysterious man named “The Creator”. I’m in the middle of submitting it, so I’ll see where it goes!

When did you first consider yourself a writer?
I thought of myself as a writer very early on, around 2nd grade. Once I realized that you can write stories as an occupation, I knew that’s what I wanted to do for the rest of my life. It’s always been a very relaxing thing for me and I feel weird when I haven’t written something in a while.

Do you write full-time? If so, what's your work day like? If not, what do you do other than write and how do you find time to write?
I currently work as a copywriter for a gaming company, so I still get to have fun writing about topics I’m interested in. I usually write after work or on the weekends. It can be hard to schedule time, but I try to fit in around 500 words a day if I can.

What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
I’m sure a lot of writers are like this, but I can only write at night. I’m not a morning person and I have trouble focusing during the day. I just like writing when it’s dark out!

As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?
I decided when I was pretty young that I wanted to be a writer. There was a brief time when I wanted to be a vet, but that faded quickly.

Anything additional you want to share with the readers?
I run a writing advice blog at krisnoel.com, so if you ever need any writing support, feel free to check it out!


Thanks, Kris. Happy writing!

Friday, January 9, 2015

Book excerpt for fantasy romance novel, A Gift Freely Given, by J. Ellen Ross

Today’s special post is a promotional book excerpt for the fantasy romance novel, A Gift Freely Given by J. Ellen Ross.

During her virtual book tour with Goddess Fish Promotions, J. Ellen will be awarding a $20 Amazon or Barnes and Noble gift card to a randomly drawn winner. To be entered for a chance to win, use the form below. To increase your chances of winning, feel free to visit her other tour stops and enter there, too.

Blurb for A Gift Freely Given:
Leisha’s father, the king of Tahaerin, bartered away her childhood with his failed invasion of a neighboring kingdom. She grew up a hostage, a guarantee of the king’s good behavior. At sixteen, she returns to a land and a throne she knows almost nothing about.

Her powerful and ruthless uncle plans to force her into a marriage or take her crown by violence. The nobles of her kingdom all expect her to fail spectacularly and are eager to fight over the scraps. But, Leisha has no intention of going along quietly with any of their plans.

As a boy, Zaraki watched as slavers butchered his family. Orphaned and starving, he was taken from the streets, trained to spy and kill. He finds a position with the new queen when he is forced to flee the only home he remembers. But the job is far larger than he anticipated and Leisha’s life is threatened from all sides.

Leisha will fight to hold her crown and her throne with the help of an unknown and unproven spy. Zaraki will try keep her alive and to keep the oaths he took - to be loyal to her, to keep her secrets and never, ever fall in love with her.


Excerpt from A Gift Freely Given:
Aniol did not disappoint. Leisha stiffened as his hand dropped to the knife at his belt. Even as an unconscious action, it told her all she needed to know. Zaraki was right. Staval had a plan for her and this was one of the men charged with seeing it through. With her uncle giving orders here, Aniol felt invincible.

Before his hand could stray further, he landed face down on the floor. Zaraki put a knee in the man’s back and yanked Aniol’s head to one side. When he pressed a light blade against Aniol’s throat, the smaller man stopped struggling and whimpered softly.

“Her Majesty was very clear, I thought. I hope this is equally as clear,” Zaraki said in a low voice, into the other man’s ear.

“He’s planning on going straight to Cyril,” Leisha hissed, seeing the intention flash through Aniol’s mind. At the first hint that she was trying to seize control of the castle, Cyril would spring the trap and turn the guards against her. She would die and likely, Symon and Zaraki along with her. Suddenly, the threat was all too real.

Zaraki made a face, still holding Aniol’s head back. Fool. He could have walked out alive. “If you’ll excuse me a moment, Your Highness?” While he did not enjoy killing he would do it. However, murdering the man in front of a sixteen year old girl was out of the question.


Author bio and links:
J. Ellen Ross lives in Texas with her husband and their four rescue dogs. She works in high tech, which has nothing to do with fantasy, romance or writing.

When she’s not busy chasing dogs around or rushing someone to the vet, she loves to read and play video games.  She has a hobby of having hobbies, so she’s also been known to do sculpting, beadwork, and painting.

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Thursday, January 8, 2015

Book excerpt for mystery suspense novel, Crashers, by Lindy s. Hudis

Today’s post is a book excerpt feature for the mystery suspense novel, Crashers by Lindy S. Hudis.

During her virtual book tour with Goddess Fish Promotions, Lindy will be awarding an autographed paperback copy of Crashers (US Only) to a lucky winner. To be entered for a chance to win, use the form below. To increase your chances of winning, feel free to visit her other tour stops and enter there, too.

Blurb about Crashers:
Fraudulent car accidents is a multi-million dollar racket, involving unscrupulous medical providers, personal injury attorneys, and the cooperating passengers involved in the accidents and who also receive a portion of the illegal proceeds. Such is the fate of newly engaged, Nathan and Shari, whose joy is tempered by the dark cloud of mounting debt. A chance encounter with a stranger in whom Shari confides her troubles, proves fortuitous: he tells her of a get-rich-quick scheme that will put her and her fiance on easy street. Seduced by the chance to move from hard times to good times in no time, she finds herself acting as a stuffed passenger the victim in a staged auto accident. Shari gets her payday, but getting out and breaking free of the insurance fraud underworld will take nothing short of a miracle. A modern day cautionary tale that uncovers how the innocent get lured into the scheme of cappers and hammers.


Excerpt from Crashers:
As the blare of the clock radio on the night table jolted her awake, Shari  Barnes rubbed her eyes, blew her long brown hair out of her face, and snuggled into Nathan Townsend’s chest. She curled her body around his middle and took a deep whiff of his salty, masculine neck.

But she couldn’t ignore the voice on the radio.

“Monday morning traffic,” she sighed.

Nathan matched the sigh and put his arms around her. “At least you don’t have to drive over the hill.”

“Yeah, I would just die if I had to drive into Beverly Hills every day to work in a beautiful office.”

Shari giggled and disappeared under their thick blue comforter for a few more moments of sleepy-headed bliss. She felt Nathan stretch up, and a moment later the radio shut off. Then he slid down next to her in the single bed they shared in their Studio City apartment, a few blocks north of Ventura Boulevard. The constant drone and rumble of another L.A. morning came clearly through the open window: cars honking, rock music blaring, the frantic scurrying sounds of the film shoot a few blocks away. Shari ran her bare feet up the inside of Nathan’s thigh.

He jumped. “Shit, your feet are cold.” He pushed her legs off of him.

“What time is it?” she murmured between kisses.

“Um, seven.” He nuzzled her neck and she felt him becoming erect against her.

“No time for that!” She threw off the covers. “Gotta be at work on time for once; gotta get my asp out of bed.”

“There’s a snake in the bed?” Nathan grabbed her with both hands and gave her belly gentle nips.

“Yeah, of the one-eyed variety.”

Shari leaped to the floor and padded naked into the bathroom. She turned the hot water in the shower to high and stepped in, filling the small bathroom with steam.

She had just poured a green drop of shampoo into her palm and was running her hands together when the flimsy yellow and white shower curtain flew back and Nathan grinned in at her. She smiled back, surprised by neither his arrival nor the partial hard-on that preceded him.

“Mind if we join you?” he asked.

“There’s enough shampoo for everybody,” Shari said as she rubbed her hands across her scalp.

He stepped into the stall, pulled the curtain closed and began to lather her hair for her. She put her hands on his back, feeling the taut muscles and the water streaming there, but did not reach down between them. It took him about five seconds to realize it and hold her away.

“You okay?”

“Fine….”

“Don’t lie; I can always tell when you have something on your mind.”

“You know me better than I know me,” she said.

“You know it.” He pushed her wet hair over her shoulders. “Come on, give.”

“I was thinking maybe I should get a second job.”

“You’re worrying about money again?”

“Well, I have to shoot my student thesis film this year or I won’t graduate. But where am I going to get the money I need?”

“How much do you need?”

“At least five figures.”


Author bio and links:
Lindy S. Hudis is a graduate of New York University, where she studied drama at Tisch School of the Arts. She is the author of several titles, including her romance suspense novel, Weekends, her "Hollywood" story City of Toys, and her crime novel, Crashers. She is also the author of an erotic short story series, "The S&M Club" and "The Mile High Club". Her short film "The Lesson" was screened at the Seattle Underground Film Festival and Cine-Nights in 2000. She is also an actress, having appeared in the television daytime drama "Sunset Beach". She and her husband, Hollywood stuntman Stephen Hudis, have formed their own production company called Impact Motion Pictures, and have several projects and screenplays in development. She lives in California with her husband and two children.



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Wednesday, January 7, 2015

Interview with business writer Maxine Attong

I'm chatting with non-fiction business writer Maxine Attong today. We're focused on her newest book, Lead Your Team to Win – Achieve Optimal Performance by Providing a Safe Space for Employees.

Bio:
Maxine Attong’s personal mission statement is to "Enhance the lives of the persons with whom I make contact". This is supported by her beliefs that:
1) Human beings are creative
2) Human beings are intelligent
3) Human beings want to make a positive contribution.

Her beliefs are evident in her writing as she celebrates the power and intelligence of people and shares the tools needed to succeed.

Maxine is a Gestalt Organizational Development practitioner, a Certified Professional Facilitator and a Certified Evidence Based Coach.

In these roles she facilitates workshops and meetings for work teams and other groups to come to decisions that everyone can live with, while providing safe and confidential environments in which her clients can achieve business or personal goals.

Maxine remains a Certified Management Accountant and is a member of the Society of Management Accountants, Ontario.

Maxine currently works as the Assistant Vice President – Strategic Planning and Implementation- at the Guardian General Insurance Company Limited.

Welcome, Maxine. What inspired you to write this book?
My first book – Change or Die - the Business Process Improvement Manual – is a technical book and a great reference manual for persons interested in business processes. I wrote this book from my head, since it documents my client experiences and work that I actually did in the Business Process Improvement field. After that book, I was challenged to write something that appealed to a wider audience by several of my friends. I also gained more confidence to write about me, to share some of my thoughts and a bit of myself with my audience. 

Lead Your Team to Win is my heart book – as such there is a lot which has a lot of me in it, my thoughts, my experiences and to say how I felt about leadership. That was one part of the inspiration. The other part is that over the years of working in corporate environments I noticed that people did not really show up at work and I know that this was keeping productivity back. I also noticed that a lot of us show up differently at work than we do in the other parts of our lives and I reflected on how this separation affected me. As a coach, I keep noticing the separation in clients and how it hampered their effectiveness. In my quest to be an effective leader I wanted a style that worked for me.


Excerpt: Pages 14-16 of Lead Your Team to Win – Achieve Optimal Performance by Providing a Safe Space for Employees

I wanted a leadership style that would work with my personality and still allow me to have a winning team. I knew that creating a safe space in my office was essential to achieving this since it would:
• Get people to work creatively and generate ideas and new solutions.
• Develop an incredible team with outstanding performance that ensured me, as the leader, promotions and wins. (My assumption is that each time a team member wins, the leader automatically gets one or two wins.) To achieve wins, team members must have big ideas and the guts to implement them. They need to fail and believe that while there’s a cost to failure, there’s no personal loss; and they can certainly try again. To win, the team needs to work together, think strategically about their actions, and always weigh consequences. The safe space provides a cocoon in which ideas are hatched, nurtured, and grown before being released for scrutiny by a wider audience.
• Provide a stable environment in which everyone can perform, even on the days when nothing seems to go right.
• Allow team members to bring to work the adult parts of themselves that they often park at the office door and retrieve when they leave the office. This safe space gives them permission to be the responsible, accountable, decision-making, trying-to-be the-best-they-could-be people they are outside of the office. These people make tough decisions every day about household budgets, their children’s future, and aging parents. They fail and keep going, juggling different balls to keep their lives and those of their loved ones on an even keel.
• Permit team members to think, and in so doing challenge me to think more. They need to ask questions so I can explain and become clearer, and thus we can all generate even more great ideas and make better decisions.
• Motivate the team so people feel good about what they are doing, and work well because of these positive feelings. When the team members feel safe, they’ll take risks that will bring rewards, and will accept challenges to grow professionally and personally.
• Keep my big ego in check, to ensure that my natural tendencies to be a benevolent autocrat don’t overtake my humanity. This keeps me honest and responsible for the things I do and say at the office. It also gives me the freedom to change my mind and not be seen as indecisive, and releases me from the burden of feeling I always have to be right.
• Satisfy my curiosity about leadership and the many strategies I’ve read about. I wanted to create an alternative style that would work with my personality and allow me to remain true to myself. I wanted to present an alternate and realistic tool that people like me could easily implement with their teams.

The safe space provides a dynamic and creative environment for the free exchange of ideas, and encourages team members to make decisions and take action. While it promotes team accountability, it does not release the leader from the ultimate responsibility for making the final decisions. The idea promotes a shared team consciousness about the reality of the bigger political landscape within which the team operates, and dissuades any pretensions of naïvety about how the organization and various stakeholders need to be maneuvered. Thus, it provides a reality check for the team and its members.


What exciting story are you working on next?
Right now I am resting. My first book was published in 2012 and Lead Your Team to Win in Sept 2014. I have two ideas in my head. One is about the strategic office – how to develop it and maintain it. The other is about female leadership and its peculiarities. My head is leaning towards the strategy and the heart towards female leadership. So until that battle is sorted and the image forms I am not going to take any steps forward. One book will emerge and that is that book that I am going to write. While that is sorting itself out I am writing short stories which is a frightening exercise itself.

When did you first consider yourself a writer?
I thought of myself as a writer when I was a kid and teenager. Through my young adult years I became an accountant and reclaimed my writer title in my 30s when I stopped being an accountant. I think that my writing status is now confirmed since I wrote my second book – Lead Your Team to Win. It is my heart book and makes me feel as I did when I was a kid.

Do you write full-time? If so, what's your work day like? If not, what do you do other than write and how do you find time to write?
I work a full-time job in corporate. I work days Monday to Friday so I write in the evenings. My days start off with journaling in the morning, a gym workout or a run, then I go to work. I start to write around 7 p.m. after I have wound down from the day’s work. It is something that does not tire me, so I end around 10 p.m. If I am in the zone, I keep going until whatever time and have a hard day the next day. I write for at least 5 hours on a Saturday. On Sundays I rest completely, no writing except for the morning journal.

How do I find time to write?
When I am writing a book I think of all the hours that I am working as wasted time that I can spend writing. I spend the lunch times in agony since I do not write on the company’s time or property. When I get home I am eager to start writing. In a way, writing helps me focus on the work day, since work offers a distraction and a time for thoughts to shape in my head as I focus on something else. I have the ability to completely switch off work when I get home so I have the time to write.

What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
I bought a red chair for my first book and wrote every sentence on that red chair. It was the place that I went to to edit, and finalize the book. I purchased a green chair for my next book and was writing from it. My partner sat in the green chair one day and did some work on it and that was the end of the chair for me. After he sat on it, the chair lost its magic for me and I never sat on it again. I reserved one end of the sofa as mine and finished Lead Your Team to Win from there. I have to claim a writing space and no one must invade it ever.

As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?
I always wanted to be a writer. I knew this since I was 8. I won my first camera as the first prize for a short story that I submitted. Over the years I won vouchers for books in various competitions and my letters to the editors were regularly published. I wrote hundreds of short stories and poems, I was always writing as a kid and as a teenager. But I did not become a writer, I became an accountant and then my writing stopped.

Anything additional you want to share with the readers?
I realize that writing is a balancing factor of my life. In the years that I did not write I felt that something was missing and that life was chaotic. When I returned to writing I felt that this is what I was meant to do.

Links:

Thanks, Maxine!

Tuesday, January 6, 2015

Interview with romance novelist Joy Frawley

Today’s spotlight shines on novelist Joy Frawley. She’s doing a virtual book tour with Goddess Fish Promotions for her time travel romance novel, Two Worlds, Two Men.

During her tour, Joy will be awarding a $25 Amazon or Barnes and Noble gift card to a lucky winner. To be entered for a chance to win, use the form below. To increase your chances of winning, feel free to visit her other tour stops and enter there, too!

Bio:
Joy Frawley is an author and writer of the upcoming romance novella; Two Worlds, Two Men published by Resplendence Publishing. Joy lives in beautiful Traverse City, Michigan relishing in living the life of the classic “townie” with her two dogs Piggs and Diggs. You can reach her at joyfrawley@gmail.com or joyfrawley.com.


Welcome, Joy. Please tell us about your current release.
Two Worlds, Two Men is a time travel romance. Jocelyn Stewart goes on holiday to Edinburgh, Scotland and has a passionate romance bloom with her innkeeper, Neely. While sightseeing in town, Jocelyn begins to go back into time to her medieval lover Sir Colin Campbell whom she had no recollection of having been his mistress. Both men own a piece of Jocelyn’s heart and as the story unfolds she must choose which life and which man she wants to be with.

What inspired you to write this book?
I was basically enlightened with the storyline and characters one afternoon out of nowhere! It was quite amazing and not wanting to forget all the details I began writing immediately.

Excerpt:
Jocelyn looked around for the driver who was supposed to be waiting for her arrival with a sign. She had hired someone to pick her up because, as an American and first-time visitor to Scotland, she had figured it would be less stressful.

She didn’t see the driver anywhere; then, just as she started feeling nervous, she saw a man holding a sign with her name on it. And what a man he was! He was broad shouldered, strong and had dark brown hair with reddish tints. He exuded masculinity like some cologne, and even across the airport, she thought she could smell it. Smoothing her unruly hair, she started to walk over to him.

The man, seeing her approach him, took a step toward her. “Are you, Jocelyn?”

When he spoke her name, she found herself frozen in place unable to respond. She’d heard this voice before; she knew this voice. This man spoke her name exactly like the dream she had had all those years ago! She had been stirred awake in bed by a voice of a man, who spoke her name with a Scottish accent. His voice was gentle and low; as if he wanted to gain her attention, but not cause her alarm. Jocelyn had clutched the sheets to her chest and stared out into the darkness of her bedroom almost feeling his intimate presence beside her. She lifted her hand up to her ear having sworn his warm breath had brushed her skin. Jocelyn remembered she had turned her head, anxiously, toward the pillow next to her and almost thought she would be looking into the eyes of a stranger; yet she had not been frightened. This man, his voice, somehow comforted her.

Now, she stood in the airport and caught her breath as she faced the man before her. Her eyes searched his face for something; though what it was she wasn’t sure. Jocelyn felt her heart beating so fast she was certain the man could hear it as memories flooded her mind of that night so long ago when he or someone spoke her name in the darkness. Was that the reason for her vacation to Scotland? Was she unconsciously trying to find the man?


What exciting story are you working on next?
I am currently working on a non-fiction book about how to overcome self-defeating thoughts and pursue your passions. I had no background in writing when I started this book and no one, including myself, had much faith initially that I would ever become published. But I pursued it anyways and achieved positive results by changing my attitude and thought process. I want to encourage other aspiring writers, and anyone else, to feel that satisfaction in their own life. I recently did a speaking engagement to aspiring writers and shared several of the points from my next book and it was rewarding to hear their feedback.

When did you first consider yourself a writer?
I considered myself a writer when I began submitting my work to writing competitions. At that point I was pretty much only writing with myself as an audience. However, once I started sending my work to romance competitions it dawned on me that I was beginning to take writing seriously and that I was thinking further ahead than just this one book.

Do you write full-time? If so, what's your work day like? If not, what do you do other than write and how do you find time to write?
I was, up to recently, working almost 50 hour workweeks. However, I am now writing full time. I have been blessed to have an incredible man in my life that helps me manage this and is immensely supportive. Once Two Worlds Two Men got released my writing work load got very demanding as far as my time and accessibility. I have had several articles, podcasts and other marketing opportunities arise the past couple months and I do not envy authors who have to juggle it all with working full time. I admire their endurance because my accessibility has been a very big bonus to me for the initial book release and all its marketing.

What would you say is your interesting writing quirk?
If I get stressed while working on a project I will whip up some nachos to help me regain my focus. If I was stranded on a desert island and could only pick one food to eat the rest of my days it would be nachos. I am not certain the nachos actually help me regain focus, but I am sticking to that story.

As a child, what did you want to be when you grew up?
Anything but an author! I thought writers were old men who had white messy hair, glasses, wore outdated vests and smelled like mothballs. I am not quite sure where that concept came from, but I do recall having that opinion of authors when I was a little girl. I am glad to say I have since lifted that belief which is good considering I am absolutely nothing like that description.

Anything additional you want to share with the readers?
Two Worlds, Two Men is a fun read that I hope brings entertainment and a few chuckles to readers. Even if it doesn’t bring world peace or cure global warming I believe romance books are popular for a reason. They bring us what we all occasionally crave which is an escape. An escape to a world different than our own. Two Worlds Two Men offers that escape to not one, but two, worlds and I hope you enjoy it!


Thanks, Joy!

Book excerpt blast for newest novel by Celeste Prater


This post is part of a book blast for the launch of Celeste Prater's newest book Fueled by Lust:Maxim. Celeste will be awarding one randomly drawn winner via Rafflecopter a $25 Amazon or Barnes and Noble gift card. Click on the tour banner to see the other stops on the tour.

A Siren Classic Erotic Sci-Fi Romance – Book 6

A simple turn of your head can change your life forever. That’s what Maxim Telarius will soon realize when he spots a female cracking up passengers at an airport counter. What he didn’t expect was to find his potential mate when the counter comedian inevitably trips over a suitcase and practically lands in his lap. One innocent touch and he’s fighting through a powerful mating surge and begging her not to leave. One blink and she could be lost to him forever.

Skylar Grey is fleeing for her life with a mysterious object stuffed in her purse and no idea where’s she heading. When she spots a gorgeous hunk she just dreamed about, what’s a girl to do? Watching the guy twist on the floor in agony wasn’t what she envisioned. Should she run, or stay to help someone that seems extremely important to her survival?

Book 6 in the Fueled By Lust Series doesn’t disappoint on the erotic, set your hair on fire expectations of the Insedi male.

Reader note: Series best read in sequence.

Enjoy an excerpt:

Maxim couldn’t tear his gaze away. She’d stopped on the edge of the crowd and was asking a couple if they knew how to get to the bus terminal. Her voice was melodic and ethereal. She thanked them and turned his way. Realizing he was staring at her like an idiot, Maxim turned to the guy sitting across from him. Shit. Had his face worn that same ridiculous expression of adoration?

Unable to help himself, he glanced back to her and was shocked to see she was now staring at him. Her eyes were wide and her lips were parted as if she was surprised. The closer she drew to him, the higher her brows rose. He felt his stomach clench when she spoke. Tingles shot up his spine and he shivered.

“You.”

Frowning, Maxim glanced to the right. He was the only “you” sitting on this side of the row of connected chairs. When he turned back to her, he watched her mouth open in surprise as her foot caught the edge of a suitcase sticking out in the aisle. She lost her footing, and he leapt from his chair. Without thought, Maxim reached out to stop the inevitable plunge to the ground. The moment she clutched his arm, their eyes locked. He rolled to the side to give her something else to land on beside the hard tiles.

Back slamming onto the floor, Maxim felt the air rush from his lungs. Her generous breasts pressed heavily against his chest before she rolled away. An intense electrical surge rushed through his system and bent his spine to the point he thought it would snap in two. Agony and bliss warred with each other to determine which one would finally kill him. He heard shouts, but they sounded muted and far away. His mind tried to reason why someone was stabbing the hollow of his throat, yet running a soothing palm across his forehead at the same time.

Feeling a hard tug on his hand, Maxim freed whatever he’d been grasping. Gritting his teeth, he fought to stay lucid as whatever was destroying him decided to finish it or go away. Something snatched his other hand, and he latched on as if it was the tenuous thread to continued breathing. He opened his eyes and everything made sense.

About the Author:
Celeste was born and raised in a small town between Dallas/Fort Worth and Austin. Wanting to see more than her small Texas town, she joined the Marines, which satisfied her craving to see more of the U.S. and her drive to see if she could be one of the few and the proud.

A firm believer in educating the mind, Celeste has achieved several advanced degrees, the latest being a master’s of science.

Her true love is writing erotic romance, especially about alien hunks that know how to treat their females.

Drusus, Severus, Cato, Lucien, Caelius, Maxim and many more have swirled in her dreams until she had to bring them to life and allow them to find love within the pages of the Fueled by Lust book series.

Book 1 DRUSUS was nominated as Top 5 Finalist and placed 3rd in the 2014 RWA Passionate Ink’s 9th Annual Passionate Plume Book Contest in Erotic SciFi/Fantasy Category. Book 2 SEVERUS achieved BEST BOOK review rating and won April 2014 BOOK OF THE MONTH Reader Poll at LONG AND SHORT REVIEWS. Book 3 CATO won the May/June 2014 and LUCIEN the September 2014 BOOK OF THE MONTH Reader Poll at LONG AND SHORT REVIEWS. All currently released books in the series have made it into the Top 5 Bestseller Lists at Bookstrand.com within days of release as well as making it into the Top 10 Hottest New Releases in Erotic Science Fiction on Amazon.

Book Series Links

Bookstrand | Amazon | Barnes and Noble | Kobo | iTunes

Author Links

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a Rafflecopter giveaway