Tag: Guest Author

  • Catch a Tiger by the Tale Blog Tour, Day Sixteen – Double Trouble with Cheryel Hutton

    Catch a Tiger by the Tale Blog Tour
    Day Sixteen – Double Trouble with Cheryel Hutton
    TT | 07 | 2K13 | 16

    Today I have something special for you!  Fellow Beyond the Veil author Cheryel Hutton and I have traded interviews.  We each came up with five questions and together, answered all ten of them for each other.  We figured it\’s a fun way to share a little about ourselves and to bring you the exciting news of our new releases.  Cheryel\’s guest post is below, and my post is at Chez Cheryel.  Enjoy!

    * * *

    Q: How did you pick your pen name?

    A: Actually, my parents picked it. I use my legal name. I did use a pen name for a short time, but finally decided I liked seeing my real name in print.

    Q: Why is the sky blue?

    Because it would look really funny if it was purple.

    A: Where do you most like to sing?

    In front of an audience. The problem is all those rotten vegetables they throw at me when I do. Rude people.

    Q: What are your five favorite ways to research for a book?

    A:
    1 Internet
    2 library
    3 asking questions via email (I’m not a phone person).
    4 road trip!
    5 workshops, classes, and documentaries

    Q: When you have a day off, what\’s your ideal way to spend it?

    A: I enjoy being curled up with a long novel and/or watching a movie (or two). But my absolute favorite way to spend a day off is with my grandkids—after which I need another day off.

    * * *

    Q: Have you named your muse or picture her/him in some way?

    A: My muse usually chooses to take the form of a dragon, and she tells me her name is Quill. As you would expect, what she says usually goes.

    Q: Have you ever been caught acting out a scene from one of your books?

    A: Oh yes. My husband thinks I’m quite amusing. Who needs TV when you can watch your wife talk to herself and gesture wildly.

    Q: Have you ever seen a cryptid? Would you like to?

    A: Well, there is that bigfoot tribe…But I’m not supposed to talk about that.

    Q: Is there something you have always wanted to do, but haven\’t? Tell us about it.

    A: I love to travel, and I’ve always wanted to explore the western part of the U.S. There is some beautiful country out there, and I’d like to see it for myself. I’ve never had the financial resources, though. Maybe I’ll make enough money from my books to be able to do that. You never know!

    Check out Cheryel\’s newest release, THE UGLY TRUTH, available from Amazon.

    Cheryel\’s Bio

    Cheryel Hutton talks to dragons. Thing is, they talk to her too, telling her stories of other dragons, of witches, werewolves, bigfoot creatures, fairies, leprechauns, and vampires—and people, of course. Some of the stories are light and funny, but some are darker and scary. Then there are the stories of evil humans—and they are the scariest stories of all. The dragon’s stories all have one theme: Love can overcome everything. Like Cheryel, dragons are romantics at heart, and believe in happy endings.

    Her husband and grown children sometimes wonder about Cheryel. That maybe she spends too much time whispering to dragons and writing down the stories the dragons tell her. But the dragons make her happy, so they’re not overly worried. The grandchildren are young enough to talk to dragons too, so they understand.

    Cheryel writes full time, putting her passion for stories, characters, critters, and words into a form she can share with others. She writes every morning, six and sometimes seven days a week. She loves writing, but she also sees it as a job, a career, and she treats it accordingly.

    When she isn’t writing, she loves spending time with her family, playing with her dogs, watching movies (especially old movies), doing crochet and other crafts, and reading a wide variety of books.

    Cheryel, her family, and her two dachshunds, all of whom have their own stories, live in Tennessee, but there are places in the far corners of the South where the impossible tends to come to life. Cheryel loves to visit them.

  • Join Me at Sean Michael\’s Today!

    So, Sean Michael was gracious enough to host me on her LiveJournal.

    Only, it was yesterday.

    Sigh.  I had an internet snafu and didn\’t get to post it until today and comment and spread the word and, in short, be gracious in return.  Mea culpa!

    So please, help me show my gratitude by stopping by Sean Michael\’s today!  And check out her new release in the Hammer series.  You\’ll be glad you did!

  • Join Me at Sean Michael\’s Today!

    So, Sean Michael was gracious enough to host me on her LiveJournal.

    Only, it was yesterday.

    Sigh.  I had an internet snafu and didn\’t get to post it until today and comment and spread the word and, in short, be gracious in return.  Mea culpa!

    So please, help me show my gratitude by stopping by Sean Michael\’s today!  And check out her new release in the Hammer series.  You\’ll be glad you did!


  • Join me over at Charlie Cochet\’s today for
    Information Overload.  DO YOU HAS IT?
  • The Fantasy of the Future

    The guilty pleasures of today are much different than those of Victorian times, which are different from those of Elizabethan times and so on.  What do you think the guilty pleasures of the future will look like?

    Join me at author Mychael Black\’s blog today and share your thoughts.  I\’d love to know!

  • Rhymes with Foreplay

    If you haven\’t visited author PG Forte\’s blog or books yet, you\’re missing out.  She\’s a lot of fun and has a great sense of humor.  I\’m so tickled to tell you that she interviewed me!  I\’m on her blog today, Rhymes with Foreplay.  Please stop on by and check it out – you\’ll be glad you did!

  • Tue Cent Twosday – A Guest Post with Kimberley Troutte

    Speeding Down the Road to Digital Publication

    a Guest Post by Kimberley Troutte

    Thank you for having me here today. Noony asked me to talk about how much digital publishing has changed the publishing industry for romance writers. Boy, where to begin?

    One great place to start is at the top with RWA (the Romance Writers of America). Every summer RWA has a big conference to discuss the industry, network, eat good food…you know, regular stuff. When I went this time I was struck by how different this conference was from the first one I attended in 2006. All because of a little invention called an ebook.

    A mere six years ago, there was a sense that a book not published by the traditional NY Big Six Publishers was somehow inferior. Self-published books were rarely considered by editors. Most writers needed an agent to get to the big houses and finding an agent to represent a new writer was tough. Being a budding romance writer, I dreamed of one day achieving that lofty pinnacle–publication at a big New York house. I thought it was my only road to success.

    And it was a rough road full of bumps, sinkholes and heavily manned gates.

    In those days (gosh, I feel like I\’m talking about the Dark Ages) the journey started when a writer completed a manuscript and sent letters (by snail mail mostly) to agents and editors to try to sell the story. The wait time to hear from one of these professionals was painfully long as the writer trucked pages back and forth and paid a small fortune to the Post Office. If a writer was lucky enough to score a good agent who then sold the work, the wait was a year or two before the book hit the shelves. A year or two.

    That was only six years ago–before Kindle, Nook, Facebook, Twitter, and email submissions. We\’ve come a long way, baby.

    At the 2012 RWA conference, all the buzz was about authors who found success by publishing through small digital-first publishers or on their own. (Fifty Shades of Gray, anyone?) The publishers heard these success stories too and, well, they freaked out a little. Imagine the big New York watching a corner of the publishing market slip through their fingers. Not only that, many already established authors were self-publishing their own works and making , gasp, more money.

    New York houses are now in a rush to catch up to the Digital Age by opening Digital lines. Editors are looking for authors to fill new spots for various genres and story lengths. Some agents troll through ebook lists looking for clients to represent. Publishers look for hot-selling indie books to publish.

    Wow, what a difference six years can make.

    What about those long waiting periods? Well, a writer can self-publish her own book in a matter of days. Days, not years. Publishing houses have had to reduce publishing times in order to compete with Amazon and to woo authors who don\’t want to wait years. In Anaheim, Kensington said that they can publish an ebook in about six months. I heard another house say 10-12 weeks! The rush to ebook publication is on.

    What does this mean to writers?

    Opportunity. Faster publication. Getting books into readers hands that have previously languished on a writer\’s harddrive. Possibilities.

    I\’ll tell you what it means to me personally.

    I used to suffer from stress dreams. Sometimes in my nightmares, I’d drive an out-of-control car at top speeds straight downhill. My kids screamed in the back seat while I stomped the useless brakes and tried to steer away from the ocean looming at the bottom of the road. I had that stupid dream five or six times and understood what it meant. My desire to be published was butting heads with gatekeepers who were tough about letting a genre-mixer storyteller like me through the gates. My goal to be published was as out of my control as that darn car was. What could I do?

    One day Carrie Underwood sang \”Jesus, Take the Wheel.\” And I realized that I shouldn’t spend so much time trying to steer that car. Instead, I needed to let go of the things I couldn\’t control and focus on what was important.

    Writing is one of those important things. I stopped worrying about how I was going to get published and focused on writing the best books I can. Learning, growing, digging deeper, I let my passion and love fill the pages. I found pure bliss. My stories were infinitely better.

    And now there are more roads to publication. My car is zipping along and whether I\’ll park at a small press, Amazon, or a big house, who knows? I have more control. One way or another, my beloved stories will be read thanks to all those indie-authors who were brave enough to pave the way and to the awesome readers who buy books.

    No more nightmares, only sweet dreams and well-paved roads from now on.

    Biography

    Kimberley Troutte has been a substitute teacher, caterer, financial analyst for a major defense contractor, aerobics instructor, real-estate broker, freelance writer, homework corrector and caregiver to all the creatures the kids/hubby/dog drag in. She lives with her husband, two sons, one dog and four snakes in Southern California.