Saturday, 9 March 2013

Huge cash/Kindle Fire/Books Giveaway & Interview: Sacrifice by Coral Russell

Original Title: Sacrifice
Author: Coral Russell
Publisher: alchemyofscrawl
Release Date: March 1st 2013
Genre: Mystery, Thriller
Buy Links: Amazon


When Mexican drug cartels fight for control along the border, Juarez becomes the murder capital of the world. In El Paso, Texas it's drug business as usual: a grifter sets out to buy her freedom, a car salesman runs drugs to make his fortune, a gang leader battles to rise among the ranks of the cartel, and a detective and his wife are ripped apart by a family secret. Everyone's fate lies in the hands of an old woman. Will she let the past die with her or take revenge the only way she knows how?

Sacrifice is a fast-paced, gritty story that'll keep you guessing, gasping, and gripping your eBook.


INTERVIEW WITH CORAL RUSSELL

1.  Is there an inspiration behind why you chose writing?

I got good grades in writing when I was in school. I figured I was pretty good at it so just kept doing it. This is where that old saying comes into play - "Success breeds success."

Friday, 8 March 2013

How to Write by the Seat of Your Pants: Outline or No?


- Guest Post by Maia Sepp

One of the eternal questions about writing is how to go about the messy business of actually putting stories together. The kind of books I write are slippery to plot: character-driven fiction is focused on following a character’s personal growth and has a lot less plot-based oomph than some genres (genres like thriller, fantasy, “active” romance).

When I was writing The Sock Wars – which took me almost six years – I found it difficult to find the story arc. I was working full-time and trying to manage a chronic illness while working crazy long hours. Four drafts were written and edited, re-written, re-edited, and  fretted over without finding the proper plot progression. In the fifth draft, I made a map of the story’s events and then cut and pasted like a madwoman until all of the scenes melded together properly. It took about a year to sort out, a difficult, very long year that was edged with frustration.  Finally, I was able to carve out the plot structure. (And there was much rejoicing.)

Eventually I decided it was time to leave the day job behind, and write full-time. I clocked out last September and my goal was to put out three books this year. The Sock Wars was almost completed, but the other two novels needed the same type of plotting attention that I had lavished on The Sock Wars, but I had only a fraction of the time. The solution: I needed to outline. The problem: I had never outlined before.

I sat down a month ago when I started the first draft of my latest novel – a comedy revolving around a support group for people with migraine called The Migraine Mafia – and I wrote an outline this time, a scratchy version in the sand of what I wanted to happen. I also started to use Scrivener, a writer’s tool that helps you plot and structure your work. Some of it has worked, and the first draft is almost completed. It’s been an interesting way to approach storytelling. I think it’ll lead to less work during the second draft, but paradoxically, it’s been harder to find the spirit of my story. Part of me feels like my spontaneity has been squished by a need to follow the outline. But  I have meandered a bit from what I laid out, and that’s been fun.

After the next two books are done, I’ll probably fall somewhere in the middle of it all: writing a loose outline but letting my characters take me where they want to go. Because, after all, isn’t that where the fun is?

Buy Now @ Amazon
Genre – Contemporary Fiction
Rating – PG13
More details about the book
Connect with Maia Sepp on Facebook & GoodReads

Thursday, 7 March 2013

Why Book Covers are So Important


- Guest Post By Meg Mims, Award-winning, Bestselling Author of Double Crossing, The Key to Love and Santa Paws

I’m an artist. I can spot a great cover right away. It should be eye-catching with a not-too-busy image, great color sense and the title and author name placed well and in a simple script. I’ve seen covers that either don’t fit the book, use almost illegible fonts, multiple images that clash or are just plain ugly.

Granted, my personal experience with covers is limited since I have only three books out. But I’ve advised others about their covers and can spot a dud or a winning cover pretty easy. Let me explain why I chose to reject the first cover my publisher approved for my book, Double Crossing. The image seemed acceptable, dark and moody for a mystery, with an image of an empty railroad track and a lone tree. However, my story was more positive – and the cover would have fit for a zombie thriller. I wanted warmer tones – not blue. I wanted a historical image of a train, perhaps crossing a bridge since that plays a big part in my novel. The cover artist had chosen a great font, so that was all set. I had the artist reverse the image, so the train looked as if it crossed the bridge from east to west, and we chose a warm orange-tone color. I thought it fit the story better, had a warmer tone and looked pleasing to the eye.

For The Key to Love, the cover artist found an image of a man and a woman with a rose, which I’d asked for – perfect! Except the rose was a pale pink, and I utilized red as a theme for the book. Red leather jacket, red car, red roses, red-toned dress for a hot date, etc. The cover artist altered the rose on the cover, and sweet perfection! She also chose a more readable font.

For Santa Paws, I’d found a photo of an adorable dog that looked like my own rescue dog – with an elf hat, next to a Christmas tree, with a simple font. Eye-catching, pleasing colors, readable, and sweet! That cover sells the book.

And that’s what it’s all about. Sales. Cover art truly does make a difference in selling your book. Make sure the image fits the genre – Regency or Victorian covers with girls in gorgeous dresses sell very well. If the setting is winter, choose a cool blue to suggest that. Summer would need a warm tone, unless it’s set in the tropics on a beach. A thriller or dark mystery might need a darker tone, but don’t overdo it – or choose a font in a complementary color. Red and green, blue and orange, yellow and purple, depending on what you want to emphasize.

Trawl Amazon or Barnes & Noble online, and see what catches your eye. A book’s cover should suggest the interior mood or tone, perhaps hint at the theme, with an image that also plays up the book’s title or genre. Check out the romantic comedy “cartoon” covers that look fun and flirty. Perfect for what’s inside. The Hunger Games had great covers too. Eye-catching images, simple and tone perfect.

A great cover really does make a difference.

Buy Now @ Amazon & Smashwords
Genre – Contemporary Romance
Rating – PG
More details about the author & the book
Connect with Meg Mims on Facebook & Twitter

Wednesday, 6 March 2013

My Journey to Becoming a Published Author


- Guest Post by George Bernstein

My novel, TRAPPED, published by small independent press, TAG Publishers, is getting rave, “best-seller” type reviews. The most common thing I hear is, “It’s so different. I couldn’t put it down.” One reader resented having to leave the story to walk her dog.

I was “an Instant success,”…or was I. Well, maybe, if you consider a 23 year voyage “Instant.”

Yes, I started writing TRAPPED in 1990, and managed to finish the first draft in probably 6 months. The idea for the main character, Jackee, came from remembering a beautiful young neighbor when we lived in North Suburban Chicago, who suffered an anesthetic accident while undergoing plastic surgery, condemning her to a vegative state for the rest of her life.

I imagined Jackee being sentient, however, still sharp of mind and able to move her eyes. I knew nothing of “Locked-in Syndrome” at the time, not realizing I’d “created” a real condition. Since Jackee was immobile, I decided to create a side plot with her husband, and the Chicago Mafia…something to engineer some physical action.

I spent more months editing, polishing, rewriting, until I had a story I loved. Surely the publishing world would love it, too, so off to the library, seeking books with lists of agents. There were several reference books that had useful article about how to write a query letter. I compiled a list, seeking agents who specialized in suspense fiction, and sent off about 15 letters, confident one…or more… would find the idea of TRAPPED as compelling as I did.

It didn’t take long for the responses to come trickling back, form letters mostly, with the pretty universal rejection comment, “It’s just not right for me. I’m sure another agent may be interested.”

Unfortunately, none of those other agents were interested, despite several more batches of queries I dispatched. All the articles urged the “newbie” not to be discouraged. Rejection is part of the game, but…well, it does get to you after a while.

Then a friend in my community had a son-in-law in New York who was a Literary Attorney. A phone call brought an invitation to send the manuscript and a synopsis, and he’d see what he could do. He was very impressed, and had offered the manuscript to friends at a large New York Agency. Things were looking up!

Then came a letter from the agent that the novel had promise, but needed professional editing. He recommended Dave King, author of “Self-Editing for Fiction Writers.”  I jumped at the chance, and Dave was terrific, with lots of good input… and the suggestion I remove the side plot. It detracts from the story, he said. I worked with his recommendations, but resisted that one change. The newly rewritten TRAPPED was resubmitted, but the agency lost interest.

Off went another battery of queries and the rejections kept coming. I attended several fine writers conferences, met agent and editors, learned how to improve my writing, and eventually did remove the side plot. Meanwhile, I was writing three more suspense novels, but kept coming back to TRAPPED, because I felt it was something special.

Finally, I started entering fiction contests, and TRAPPED became a finalist in the Florida Writers Association RPLA contest in 2012. Then I noticed that TAG Publishers, a small independent Texas publisher, was trying to enlarge their fiction line by running “The Next Great American Novel.” I was becoming jaded and was seriously considering self-publishing, as I’d done for my non-fiction fishing book, TOOTHY CRITTERS LOVE FLIES. But I “girded up my loins,” and sent TRAPPED to TAG. What could I lose, other than 350 pages of paper and some in and postage.

I was so unprepared when Dee Burks, editor for TAG, called me, that it took me a full minute to realize what was happening.

“Everyone here loves your novel,” she said. “You’ll be a winner in our contest if you’ll allow me to edit it and make a few changes. If you’re willing to work with us, we will publish TRAPPED. Are you interested?” What a silly question! I’d been accepting most expert suggestions for over 20 years, so I was ready.

Dee is a great editor and had some fine ideas on improving the novel. Foremost was converting the entire story to the single, 1st person viewpoint of Jackee. All the chapters dealing with other characters were eliminated, and whatever went on in those had to be discovered by Jackee, locked inside her head. Dee did want to change the final scene, which I resisted. After listening to my arguments, she agreed, but we did expand and modified some of the last chapters, all to great effect.

And one of the other most persistent comments I get is, “I loved the ending.” One reader admitted she reread it 3 times, she loved it so much. So do I!

So, that’s how I became an “Instant hit,”…after 23 years of trying. Now that I’m having some success, my other 3 novels have a platform to launch from. It’s getting there in the first place that takes all the work…and the pugnacity not to give up.

Buy Now @ Amazon
Genre – Mainstream / Suspense 
Rating – PG13
More details about the book
Connect with George Bernstein on Facebook & Twitter
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