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Interviews by Dante

Welcome to Interviews by Dante the home of Romance Author Interviews. Enjoy. If you're an author and wish to be interviewed by me then click the link below to send me an email and I'll get you on the list.
Interviews post on the 10th, and 20th of each month. As of June 1st 2015 Interviews by Dante is exclusively interviewing Romance Writers. 

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Michele Wesley Interview

1/20/2016

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The guest author for today on Interviews by Dante is Michele Wesley. She is a writer of Paranormal Romance. Her latest work Anger and Arrogance is book three in the Smoke and Fire Series. It is set to release on January 30th.
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Please tell us a little about yourself.
Engaged, no children, and I actually enjoy writing so much that I never seem to have enough time to write. Eldest of seven and love it because my sibling actually listen to me most of the time. 
 
My Bio:
Michele Wesley was born in New Orleans, Louisiana and grew up on Elm Hall Sugarcane Plantation just out-side the small Cajun town of Napoleonville, Louisiana.  She is a graduate of Northwestern State University, LA and currently reside in Franklin, VA. Michele proudly served on active duty in the military with deployments to Iraq and Kuwait. After completing her military service, she worked as a Department of Defense Contractor for two Fortune 500 companies in Baghdad, Iraq, Kuwait, and Bagram, Afghanistan. She has had the opportunity to travel the world, visiting and touring over twenty different countries.
 

Tell us about your latest book.
My latest book, Anger & Arrogance, is set to release in January 30, 2016. It is the third book of my Smoke & Fire Series, Adult Paranormal Romance. The book, Anger & Arrogance, contains danger, violence, and intrigue, but it also contains drama and lots of arguing between the two main characters that is sure to keep readers laughing and interested. The Paranormal sparks of Anger and Arrogance will keep readers guessing and amazed.
Also out December 21, 2015 is my  Prequel Novelette, Sparks.  Sparks is a Novelette that precedes my first book Smoke & Fire.

 
What do you have coming out in the future?
Aside from the first two released books of the Smoke & Fire Series, I have also completed five additional books in the Series.  I have completed Book #1 of my Young Adult Dystopian Trilogy called Shackles of Unrest, three Erotica Novellas, and have nearly completed a Horror novel.
 
Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
My Paranormal books are of a series, but I write them so that they can also be stand alone and read in any order.
 
Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
Paranormal romance can be sweet, spicy, erotic, and sexy.  You can take it in any direction with any and every mix of character you can think of.  I try to give my readers romance and sex.  Not bad sex either, good nail-breaking, talk dirty, grab the sheets, and a hand full of hair kind of sex. Some of my romances will also be multicultural and interracial. A lot of traditional publishers and agents are unwilling to represent multicultural or interracial romance of any kind, but what they don’t seem to realize is that there is a big market for it. There are readers that are interested in reading about relationships that maybe similar to theirs or some readers may simply want to read about something different. I am inspired to introduce readers to the something different they may be hoping for and probably wasn’t expecting.
 
Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
I love writing romance, but I also write Young Adult, and Horror.
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After a three-year nightmare relationship; Alana is convinced she will never find love and lets her father talk her into marrying a man she’s never met. She agreed to it, but it doesn’t mean she has to like it; Alana’s immediate distaste for her new husband has her determined to make his life a living hell. She maintains her combative stance while trying to ward off his arrogant appeal. 
 
Devin admits he’s met his match as his new wife proves to be a hand-full. Their arguments become legendary battles as he struggle to open his mind to her. Time and a whole lot of healing are the remedies that will allow him to peel away scabs from Alana's past to reveal the beauty she keeps hidden. 
 
Will the arguing couple call a truce and check their rearview before a lurking monster catches them off guard?
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New Release
for January 2016
From where do you draw your inspiration?
Reading a lot of Paranormal Romance, I started to see the same characters and scenarios over and over. I wanted to change up the game and push readers to allow themselves to think outside the box that has been built around our Paranormal Romance novels. The main character and heroine in Smoke & Fire is a black female, not a typical character in Paranormal Romance novels.  I have also introduced new types of paranormal power and abilities and twist and scenes that will keep the readers turning the pages.
 
Do you ever base your characters on real people in your life?
I don’t base my character on a specific person, but I do built characters from bits of people in my life including myself. 
 
What authors inspire your writing?
My paranormal romance is inspired by L. A. Banks and Laurell K. Hamilton.
My young adult series were inspired by today’s real world events. This book gives us a serious reality check, touching on subjects sparked from our nation’s current state of unrest. It serves to remind us of how far we have fallen and how much further we can fall down the rabbit hole of despair and destruction of ourselves and our nation.  It gives us a glimpse of what can happen to us and our nation years from now if we don't reign in the hate and embrace our compassion and goodness.

 
How have your real life experiences influenced your writing?
I have had the privilege of leading quite an exciting life so far. From the military to deployments in Iraq and Kuwait to working as a contractor for the Dept. of Defense with deployment in Afghanistan.  I have travel all across the globe and seen and experienced life among many different cultures. I have enjoy trips and traveled to places from my bucket list: like visiting the pyramids of Egypt and walking inside the Great Pyramid to relaxing on a beach in the Maldives or Jamaica to being on Safari in Kenya.
 
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
I work a full-time day job as a government employee. Since I can’t yet afford to hire someone to do the marketing for my books or run my website and social media accounts: I do it all on my own (for now.)
 
What was your road to publishing like?
Tell us about it. Horrible. I didn’t know much about publishing at the time and went with a publisher that was only interested and taking as much money from me as possible versus actually trying to get a good quality book from me.  I signed a two-book deal with that publishing company and unfortunately, I will follow through with what I started.  I am using amazon to self-publish the rest of my paranormal books. I have learned how to format my own books and am excited to keep learning as much as I can about the industry and about improving my writing skills.
 
How did you come up with the title of your book?
I based the title of the characters who were mostly all fire and anger.
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Face of an Angel...mind of a Death Warrior
Agent Sori Knight, codename 'Smoke,' curses like a sailor and leave bodies at every turn, but somehow manages to steal hearts and save the good guys. The headstrong agent is forced to unleash her inner-monster when an assignment leads to the most elusive and deadly criminal she has ever had to hunt.
 
Breathtakingly Sexy...mind kissed by Rage
Agent Mycale Phillips' attraction to Sori is instantaneous. He thinks he may be in over his head when partnered with her but soon learns that a touch of evil is necessary if you want to survive in a world of Smoke & Fire!
 
Will secret abilities they are determined to hide be enough to pull them from death's grip?

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Click image for explanation.
Available Now
Amazon
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Books A Million
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Do you read romance or do you prefer other genres?
I read all types of romance: Western, Sweet, traditional, erotica…I also love to read paranormal, dystopian, drama, and science fiction.
 

What is your absolute favorite book or books and why is it special to you?
My all-time favorites is A Farewell to Arms by Earnest Hemingway. This book was sad, serious, interesting, but also had sprinkles of funny. This book and the books below are all books I can pick up anytime and read them over and over and over.
Some of my other Favorites:
The Historian by Elizabeth Kostova
The Edge of Dawn by Beverly Jenkins
God Don’t Like Ugly by Mary Monroe
Angels & Demons by Dan Brown
The Bone Garden by Tess Gerritsen
The Testament by John Grisham

 
Have you won any awards for your writing?
No, but just seeing and knowing that people are buying my books is all the award I will ever need.
 
What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
Editing and Marketing.
 
What is the easiest part of the writing process for you? 
Writing and creating the first draft.
 
Which of your characters is your favorite and why?
Smoke, from my first Paranormal Romance novel Smoke & Fire; I believe she is most like me.
 
Who or what are your inspirations/influences?
I have always been inspired by books. My favorite books inspire me to keep writing to hopefully gain readers that will love one of my books as much as I love my favorite books.
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Mesmerizing beauty…mind kissed by death
Agent Kris “Yala” Lawrence finds herself in the middle of a sadistic magic show. Standing in the Medical Examiner’s office, the last thing she expects to see is a human torso in a glass encased box that the ME claims is still alive. Come Again?!  She learns the box is one of three-pieces and agrees to follow instructions left by the mad magician if it means receiving and reconnecting the rest of the victim. Usually a shooter and not an investigator, Yala uses her chameleon-like disguise abilities to track the suspect.
 
Smothering good looks…melt your senses deadly
Agent Kevin “Kay” Nazari request to be partnered with Yala after a chance meet leaves him yearning to see her again. Trying to keep a human alive when they are arriving in parts is as impossible as it sounds and Kevin learns the true meaning of Body Box as he help track a killer hell bent on sending them victims in parts.
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Click image for explanation.
​Available Now
Amazon
Barnes & Noble
Books A Million
Kobo
What is your preferred writing environment?
First: Plush couch, glass of wine, cheese, & fireplace. Second: Patio on a nice sunny day with a light breeze, under an umbrella.  Third: Any nice blue breezy beach under an umbrella.
 

How would you describe your writing style? 
Free writing.  I free write for hours at a time without corrections. I often start at any point within the book, beginning, middle, or end.
 
Do you have a careful plan when plotting your stories or do you just go with the flow?
I just go with the flow.
 
With many publishing routes available today, which felt the most reliable to you when it came to the many choices?  
Self-publishing seemed the best route to take to test the waters and cut my teeth.  However, I’d like to try traditional publishing for my young adult books.
 
When did you know you truly wanted to give writing a shot?
When I found myself for the first time in 23 years unemployed.  I had always wanted to write, but never had the time. So, when I finally had the time I took advantage of it, writing more than six complete, unedited novels, and starting several promising others.
 
Do you have any advice for other writers and what is it?
Don’t be afraid to give writing a shot, especially if writing is what’s in your heart.  If you find yourself thinking of and writing more than you do anything else, don’t stop writing. Try to write something every day, even if it’s just a page. Make time to do what you love.  Educate yourself about every aspect of the writing world.  Give your writing time to grab the market, don’t force it and don’t rush it.
 
Wild Card Question.
As an author, what is the one question that you wish people would ask you, but no one ever has and what would your answer be to that question?

I wish people would ask me for free copies or downloads of my books more often or ask me if I mind if they shared my work. One, If I have free copies are downloads, I will be happy to give them away and if someone would like to share my work, I will take that as a compliment and encourage them to do so. My only hope is that they would be willing to provide an honest review of my books.
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Much too often we find ourselves wondering how a character was born. What made them into the hero they have become? What made them such an excellent lover or such an expert at taking care of others? What made them such a nice guy or girl? How did they become such a villainous monster or mass murderer? 
 
This novelette gives off a few sparks of the flame that ignited two explosive characters from Smoke & Fire, Book #1 of the Smoke & Fire Series. Rage and untapped emotions are what seep the fumes that make these characters jump off the pages. The Smoke & Fire series is uniquely written, allowing readers to jump into the series at any of the first six books.
 
Sori “Smoke” Knight and Mycale Thomas Phillips are deadly, sometimes lovable, and totally emotionally dysfunctional. Despite facing obstacles where emotions are concerned, they somehow manage to keep fighting for the good guys. They are the pokers that stroke the flames that burn through this action packed, sexually charged, emotionally unstable series infused with murder and mayhem. This novelette sneaks a peek into Sori and Mycale’s younger years.
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Click image for explanation.
Released
December 21, 2015
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S. L. Bynum Interview

12/20/2015

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The guest author for today on Interviews with Dante is S. L. Bynum. She is a writer of Paranormal Romance. Her latest work is Grim Crush, book one in the Grimly Ever After series.
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Please tell us a little about yourself.
I started writing when I was 12, and my first novel was supposed to be like a book in the “Goosebumps” series. It was awful. The books I have out now were written after a lot of practice. I’m 26, and besides books, I like desserts, playing games, and dancing to music (mostly when I’m alone). I live in the city of Greensboro, NC.
 
Tell us about your latest book.
Grim Crush is about seventeen-year-old Xia, who is a grim reaper and has three Rules of Reaping she has to follow. She’s not supposed to show herself to living humans, but one boy, a Native American named Shilah, can see her anyway. The two of them start to fall for each other, and that brings problems from Xia’s boss and father, the Angel of Death.
 
What do you have coming out in the future?
The sequel to Grim Crush, which is currently titled Grim Fate. And then the third and final book in the series.
 
Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
A series called Grimly Ever After.
 
Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
Usually a book or movie has to have a bit of romance for me to love it. I especially like when two characters first fall in love, when they get those butterflies and dreamy looks in their eyes. It makes me swoon. But I like romance more when it’s mixed with something else to make it even more exciting, so that’s why I chose to write a paranormal romance series.
 
Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
I definitely write in other genres, mostly fantasy and science fiction. I also write a bit of mystery and thrillers.
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​1. Do not interfere with someone's death. 
2. Do not become emotionally involved. 
3. Do not show yourself to the living. 

As a grim reaper, seventeen-year-old Xia has to follow these Rules. But when she meets Shilah, a Native American boy who can see reapers, she figures the rules don't apply. To find out why he can see her, she pretends to be human, since carrying a scythe probably isn't the latest teen craze. Things become unnerving as she begins experiencing first-time affection with Shilah, but she's irreversibly drawn to him. Suddenly Xia finds herself breaking Rule Two, even while collecting dead souls behind Shilah's back. It isn't long before she is caught red-handed by the Angel of Death himself, and then not only is her relationship at risk, but also Shilah's soul. And this leaves Xia wondering: can love overcome Death? 

GRIM CRUSH is a teen paranormal romance that shows how love can transcend the boundary between life and death.
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Click image for explanation.
find it on Amazon
Do you ever base your characters on real people in your life?
Yes, sometimes. Mostly I try to put a bit of myself in my main characters, and if someone requests to have their name in one of my books, sometimes I do that too!
 
What authors inspire your writing?
J. K. Rowling, Christopher Paolini, and R. A. Salvatore
 
How have your real life experiences influenced your writing?
My experiences helped me learn what my characters would feel in certain situations. For example, I have gone through struggles with love, and I incorporated that in Grim Crush. I didn’t have any experience with affection from guys much in my teen years, so I know how my character, Xia, feels.
 
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
Watch TV shows like The Walking Dead, Supernatural, Game of Thrones, etc. I also like being outside, listening to music, playing games, and dancing sometimes.
 
What was your road to publishing like? Tell us about it.
It was a struggle every step of the way. I wrote a few novels and sent them out to hundreds of agents. I kept getting rejected, even though they said my writing was good. So I tried publishing Grim Crush with a small press, but eventually they released me from my contract. Finally I decided to skip the middleman and get my work straight to the readers by self-publishing. And I’m getting great feedback!
 

How did you come up with the title of your book?
Since the book is about a grim reaper, I wanted the word “grim” in the title. I went through several different words to go with it, and then I found one that made the book sound like the beginning of teenage love, which starts with a crush. Therefore, Grim Crush was born.
 
Do you read romance or do you prefer other genres?
Funny enough, I never read plain romance books. Fantasy is my favorite genre, but I LOVE books with a touch of romance in them. I read mostly YA.
 
Have you joined any writer’s groups?
I have online. There’s one I actively look at and participate in on Goodreads, called Support Indie Authors.
 
What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
Getting stuck on a scene in my book and not knowing what should come next for my characters.
 
What is the easiest part of the writing process for you?
Writing action scenes! My hands just fly across the keyboard and my mind shuts out everything around me.
 
Which of your characters is your favorite and why?
Xia, because I identify with her struggles of being devoid of love and affection, because I was too when I was a teen.
 
Do you have a careful plan when plotting your stories or do you just go with the flow?
Both. I have a vague outline in the beginning, but by the time I’m finished writing the story, it surprises me how different it is from the original outline.
 
With many publishing routes available today, which felt the most reliable to you when it came to the many choices?
Self-publishing. I have control of everything and I can choose when to get my books out to readers, instead of waiting years in-between books in my series.
 

When did you know you truly wanted to give writing a shot?
When I was sixteen, although I didn’t start working hard at making a career of it till I was eighteen. I thought if J. K. Rowling could become a billionaire writing books, I should at least be able to make a decent living from it!
 
Do you have any advice for other writers and what is it?
Follow your heart no matter what anyone else tells you. Do what you love, even if it’s a risk.
 

Wild Card Question.
As an author, what is the one question that you wish people would ask you, but no one ever has and what would your answer be to that question?

Have I ever had an experience like the one in my book?
I experienced what I think was first love, but I was too shy to let the guy into my life and heart. And I never knew that feeling of affection and closeness with my first love, but if I had, it would’ve been new, scary, and very exciting. That’s how Xia feels when she first discovers affection with Shilah in Grim Crush.
s. l. bynum's website
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Ellie Midwood Interview

12/15/2015

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The guest author for today on Interviews with Dante is Ellie Midwood. She is a writer of Historical Romance​. Her latest work is The Girl From Berlin: Standartenfuhrer’s Wife. The first book in The Girl From Berlin series.
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​Please tell us a little about yourself.
Ellie Midwood is a New York based author who loves writing about her city and its people. She's a health obsessed yoga enthusiast, a neat freak, an adventurer, Nazi Germany history expert, polyglot, philosopher, a proud Jew and a doggie mama.
Ellie lives in Brooklyn with her Sicilian fiancé and their Chihuahua named Shark Bait.

 
Tell us about your latest book.
Basically it’s a historical romance and a spy thriller in one. This is a diary of Annalise Meissner, a young German Jew with long time ago falsified papers, living a carefree life in pre-war Berlin. A talented ballerina, she comes from a wealthy family and at first doesn’t want to concern herself with the changes her country starts undergoing under the new Nazi regime. However, when the oppressions against the Jewish population begin, she realizes that she can’t be a silent bystander and swears to help her people in any way possible.
She falls in love and gets married to her father's longtime friend, Standartenführer Heinrich Friedmann, who even though he works for SD – the Reich Secret Service – seems to share her views, and soon Annalise learns why. Her new husband turns out to be a counterintelligence agent working for the US government, and together they start a dangerous game against the sinister Gestapo, trying to save as many lives as they can and not to compromise themselves.
But it's not only the persecuted people Annalise wants to save; she meets the leader of the Austrian SS Gruppenführer Ernst Kaltenbrunner who everyone seems to fear, but for some reason Annalise isn't intimidated by the Chief of the Austrian Gestapo and doesn't believe the rumors about his brutality. Gruppenführer Kaltenbrunner isn't hiding the fact that he would love to get this beautiful girl as his mistress, but Annalise, despite the mutual attraction, stays faithful to her beloved husband. However, the risky game she’s playing will soon change everything…

 
What do you have coming out in the future?
Currently I’m working on Book 3 in the series – War Criminal’s Widow, which will be the last one in the planned series, and after that I’ll have another story coming out, which will be set in pre-war Germany.
 
Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
It’s a series consisting of three books: Book One – Standartenfuhrer’s Wife, in which the action concentrates mainly on the character development of Annalise, my protagonist, and how she grows and changes after facing horrors that her country plunges into. Book Two – Gruppenfuhrer’s Mistress has a very different mood, it’s very provocative and erotic, since Annalise has to play a dangerous game of getting close to the infamous Chief of the RSHA (Nazi Germany Secret Service) and she’s not sure if she can fight their mutual attraction and stay loyal to her husband. Book Three – War Criminal’s Widow tells a very dramatic story of the two lovers during the last few months of war and later of the Nuremberg process, where Annalise’s beloved is being tried. It’s probably the most emotional part, which tells a story of love, loss and hope, which one can never lose. I didn’t want to concentrate on the same kind of feelings throughout the whole series, I wanted to show how they evolved and changed under certain circumstances, and how people sacrifice themselves for the ones they love.  
 
Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
The Girl from Berlin is not purely historical romance, it’s also a spy thriller and a historical fiction as well, because all the historical events in the book are real, just like some of the characters who are also based on real people living in that period of time. That’s what makes it unique, the credibility and the possibility of everything described in the book – even the fictional events – could really happen.
 

Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
I do write in different genres, even though historical romance would be my favorite, for example my book The Brooklyn Boys Club tells a story of a young Italian-American boy living in Bensonhurst Brooklyn and trying to escape the fate of the rest of the youth who are being pulled into the dangerous world of the underground rulers of the neighborhood – the Italian mafia. So it’s kind of a Godfather type of story, but with a very light side to it, it’s very humorous and not your typical bloody type of mafia book.
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​The Girl from Berlin is a beautiful love story of two brave people who weren't afraid to fight against the Nazi regime. A Jewish girl and an SS officer working for the Reich Main Security Office, they weren't meant to be together, yet they fall in love and start a dangerous game against the sinister Gestapo, the bets in which are people's lives...
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Click image for explanation.
find it on amazon
​From where do you draw your inspiration?
Mostly from documentaries I watch and biographies I read; it’s very helpful in building a story and makes it much easier to create realistic characters.
 
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
I love my yoga classes, exercise and meditation help me to relax and to refresh my vision, I always come back home very motivated and with new ideas that didn’t occur to me before. I also love reading a lot and enjoy finding new material on the subject I’m currently working on. To me it’s like treasure hunting, discovering new materials and documents, and I love putting those unknown to the general public facts in my books.
 
How did you come up with the title of your book?
I wanted it to be something simple and something authentic at the same time, that’s why the series is called The Girl from Berlin (since the story is told from the point of view of my protagonist, a Berlin girl), and subtitles are so German-sounding  - Standartenfuhrer’s Wife and Gruppenfuhrer’s Mistress. I didn’t translate the military ranks in English on purpose, just like most of the notions and organizations, to make it more authentic.
 
What is your absolute favorite book or books and why is it special to you?
Probably right now it would be The Kommandant’s Mistress by Alexandria Constantinova Szeman, it is an extremely provocative novel which tells a story of a young Jewish girl who was chosen to give sexual favors to the Kommandant of one of the concentration camps. I love re-reading this book, there’s just something into it that makes you want to come back to it again and again.
 
Have you joined any writer’s groups?
As soon as I started writing I joined Goodreads and keep communicating with other authors through it, I love that platform, it gives countless opportunities both to the authors and readers to discover each other and to promote their work.
 
What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
Definitely editing. It’s just my problem I think because it’s very hard to start re-writing something when your story is already finished in your eyes. But I’m very lucky to have an amazing editor, Alexandra, who’s been more than helpful and always knows how to guide me and motivate me to make some scenes stronger or better. She makes this hardest part very easy for me.
 
Which of your characters is your favorite and why?
Besides my protagonist, Annalise, my favorite character would definitely be her chief and lover – the Chief of the RSHA Ernst Kaltenbrunner. He’s a very complex character and changes greatly throughout the whole series and it’s fascinating to discover his true personality under all the layers of arrogance and sarcasm. He was a very controversial political figure of his time and I love the edge his eccentric attitude adds to the whole story.
 

Who or what are your inspirations/influences?
While writing The Girl from Berlin series my inspirations were the real people living in that period of time. I studied a lot of memoirs and biographies to create the closest to life characters. Many heroic things were done even in such a horrifying environment as Nazi Germany was, and I wanted to transfer it into my story.
 
What is your preferred writing environment?
I always say that I need three things to write: home, silence, night. This way I’m fully immersed into my story without anything distracting me (and you can only imagine how distractive a city like New York can be!)
 

Do you have a careful plan when plotting your stories or do you just go with the flow?
Normally I have the basic story in my head before I start writing a new book, but every new chapter sometimes unravels in some unexpected way; all my stories are character-driven and I love letting them lead the way and make the story. 
 
When did you know you truly wanted to give writing a shot?
I’ve been writing my whole life, whether short stories or little essays, but you know that you really have to write something, when you have this story burning a hole in your head, which just has to be told. Then I sit down and write, because I know that later I’ll be re-reading that story many times.
 
What is your favorite quote?
“When writing a novel a writer should create living people; people not characters. A character is a caricature.” (Ernest Miller Hemingway)
I always try my best to follow this quote while writing my books, that’s why my characters make mistakes, they do things they’re not supposed to, they turn from good to bad and back to good again just like in real life. But they’re always very honest about their choices.

 
Do you have any advice for other writers and what is it?
Never give up and don’t take anything negative said about your work personally. Ten people might not like your work, but one will find it fascinating and will become your most loyal fan. And of course never keep still and work on your writing, improve yourself, do the research, attend seminars, read articles on the topic… Always keep in mind that writing is work and a lot of effort needs to be put into a really good book.
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Isabel Curtis Interview

12/10/2015

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The guest author for today on Interviews with Dante is Isabel Curtis. She is a writer of New Adult Contemporary Romance. Her latest work is Unexpected Love, book one in the Unexpected series.
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​Please tell us a little about yourself.
Hello everyone! I’m Isabel Curtis, and I’m a 25 year old indie author. I started my writing career as a YA writer, but now I also write New Adult/Contemporary Romance books. I’ve spent my life mostly traveling, and reading, and during the past few years I’ve turned my passion for writing into an almost full-time job.
 
Tell us about your latest book.
My latest book is called “Unexpected Love” and it’s the first installment in the “Unexpected” series. It’s a contemporary romance which features Olly, a college student, and Daniel, a lawyer: they fall (unexpectedly) in love but at some point life gets in the way and… you have to read the book to learn how it ends.
 
What do you have coming out in the future?
I have a few YA novels I plan on publishing in late 2016, yet right now I’m more focused on the new adult genre, so I’m writing a prequel and a sequel to the “Unexpected Love” book I published in September 2015. I also have a stand alone novel I plan on publishing in a year or so.
 
Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
The new adult contemporary romance book “Unexpected Love” is part of a series, called “Unexpected”, and I plan on having at least other four books in the series publishing within the next few months.
 

Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
I started reading lots of contemporary romances a while ago and I’ve been intrigued by this genre and style ever since. I began thinking of a story line which fit perfectly in this genre and I thought I’d give it a try. I like to take on new adventures and challenges. I already have the whole “Unexpected” series sort of outlined (there will seven books in total) and a new series called “The Interpreter” which I hope to get started in 2016. Both series feature very interesting characters that I try develop in a clear and sincere way throughout the whole narration, and the readers can truly relate to some big life choices they make, and even though the good guy might sometimes, in the end, turn out to be not so good it’s pretty easy for the reader to identify himself/herself with the character… which makes it harder to hate him. My books are not just romantic stories, I try to given them a more meaningful message that can be passed on.
 

Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
No, I began my writing career as a young adult author and I have published a YA coming-of-age book called “Before Life Happened” which is part of the “Before” series. I plan on writing both genres for a very long time, since I have lots of stories ready to be written both in the YA and NA romance genre.
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A SEXY CONTEMPORARY LOVE STORY  
 
Olly Biel decided long ago that love was just not in her plans, College was her only priority and nothing (and no one) was going to change that. There was no time for a relationship. That is, until Daniel Kingston came along and unexpectedly made her question everything she knew. But Daniel has a past, and it's about to catch up. Will he break her heart in the end? 

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Click image for explanation.
find it on amazon
From where do you draw your inspiration?
Actually, anything can sort of trigger my imagination and lead me to create characters/stories in my head: a movie, a song, a poem, a book, an image…. As soon as the slightest plot idea is growing in my mind I let my inspiration take over and before I know it the whole book is coming to life.
 
How have your real life experiences influenced your writing?
Sometimes I find myself writing about “personal” experiences (in terms of dialogues or scenarios or places) I’ve actually lived or that have really taken place, but that’s a very minor part that influences my writing. In most cases it’s just pure imagination.
 
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
I translate, I run a blog, I read, I market my books, I travel, I take my dog out for a walk, I do lots of things. But no matter what I do, I’m always thinking about writing.
 
What was your road to publishing like? Tell us about it.
I decided to self-publish right away: I’ve never wasted my time looking for an agent or a publisher, but that doesn’t mean I won’t try that in the future. But I like the idea of self-publishing, doing your own marketing/promotion, choosing your own cover, having a closer relationship with the readers… It’s a pretty interesting world and I like it, plus it’s not that hard nowadays to self-publish (there are many platforms out there that make the process pretty smooth and easy). It’s all just a matter of marketing and promotion.
 
So once my first book was finished, I hired a professional proofreader and editor. In the mean time I created the book cover, I put online my author website, built a Facebook page and my twitter account along with some other social media networks to promote my books (ie. Goodreads) and within a month the book was available on most online stores. The initial promotion came from a Goodreads giveaway I started to promote the launch of my book, and the feedbacks were great!
 

How did you come up with the title of your book?
Strangely enough, titles come pretty easy to me. The fil rouge of the “Unexpected” series is  - as you can imagine - having to face unexpected events. So in each book the protagonists find themselves experiencing surprising and unforeseen situations that lead to certain outcomes that they had not anticipated. “Unexpected Love” is all about Olly (the main character) who falls in love when she least expects it… but nothing ever goes the way we plan, after all. I’m enjoying writing this series because I get to create interesting plot twists which leave the reader always wondering what will happen next.
 
Do you read romance or do you prefer other genres?
I’ve started reading lots of romance at the beginning of last year, and I really enjoy it. Although I am also a big fan of coming-of-age YA novels and the dystopian genre.
 
What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
Writer’s Block, for sure. Sometimes I know what I want to write, I just seem to lack the words. I know where I want to go, but I don’t know how to get there and it gets frustrating. I find myself wasting so much time just staring at the blank page, writing then deleting, writing some more and then deleting again. It can go on for days.
 
What is the easiest part of the writing process for you?
I guess the easy part for me, for now, has been never running out of ideas for a new story. I’ve heard about writers who at some point in their career are stuck because they don’t know what they are going to write next, or what they want to work on because they have no inspiration. Fortunately, I’m never out of inspiration and ideas so that makes it easier to start a new project right away as soon as I’m finished with one. I think it’s very important for a writer to write, write, and write. Either if it’s just a blog post or a short random chapter. As long as if you have your inspiration by your side, you’re doing well.
 
Do you have a careful plan when plotting your stories or do you just go with the flow?
I don’t do the chapter-by-chapter outline strategy that some writers seem to love. I’ve tried that but it just isn’t for me. I usually just sit at my computer and let the words flow on their own. I might start a dialogue between two characters not having the slightest idea of where that’s going to take me, and I like it.
 
When did you know you truly wanted to give writing a shot?
It all began a few years ago, when I started have serious plot ideas for a book and I felt the need to start writing some scenes down. Then at some point I realized that my “ideas” could really turn into a full-length novel, so I said “why not?”. I started writing the whole book during my free evenings, and whenever I could take a break from my freelancing job (I used to be a full time translator). I felt like I had so much to say, and I decided that I didn’t want to keep it all to myself anymore.
 
 What is your favorite quote?
Oh, there are so many I’m having a hard time choosing just one. It depends I guess on my mood, but right now there’s a quote by Sophocles that’s popping into mind:
 
“I have no desire to suffer twice, in reality and then in retrospect."— Sophocles, Oedipus Rex

 
Do you have any advice for other writers and what is it?
First of all, I’d say: read a lot. Read books from authors who write the same genre as you, books like the one you plan on writing, and even other types of books. Just read.
Get a website, a Goodreads page, a Twitter account and a Tumblr blog.
Then, DO hire a professional proofreader/editor to help you with any typos or grammar errors you might have missed, readers hate that kind of stuff and might influence their reviews.
But in the end the best advice I feel like giving is just this one: write, and do it for yourself. If you feel that’s your vocation, don’t give up. 


 
Wild Card Question.
As an author, what is the one question that you wish people would ask you, but no one ever has and what would your answer be to that question?

 
Why did you decide to publish under a pen name?
 This is a pretty interesting question, I would sort of have to psychoanalyze myself and try to figure out why I don’t want people to know who is the real person behind the books I write. I’m about to give you a pretty complicated and messed up answer, so I apologize from the beginning if you won’t be able to follow my train of thought. Just know that it makes total sense to me.
 
Truth is, no one in my family knows about this passion of mine and when I started writing I never told anyone that this was what I really wanted to do. I guess time passed and it became harder to let them know about my “parallel life”. They just think I sit at my computer all day working… they just don’t really know what I work on. Creativity never really blossomed in my house, so I grew up believing that writing could never be regarded as a “job”.
 
Writing shows so much about the author: his/her most deepest thoughts, fears, ideas, personality… writers put so much meaning into their words that it makes them so raw and open, and vulnerable… and this scares me. If strangers read my thoughts, that’s okay because to them I’m just a writer, someone they do not know. When I read, I barely take into consideration the author, I care more about the characters and their story - and I guess my readers do the same with my books. But letting your friends and relatives read your mind through your writing gives them so much more insight on who you really are, and it gives them some kind of power over you that I do want them to have. I guess we could say that I don’t care what a stranger thinks about me, but I do care what those close to me think.
To my readers, I’m a writer.
To my family, I’m a person.
 
Plus, I like having a double life.
It makes my days so much more interesting.
 
Writing is my private world, and only those who do not know they are accessing it are welcome. 
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Faye Hall Interview

12/5/2015

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The guest author for today on Interviews with Dante is Faye Hall​. She is a writer of Historical Erotic Romance. Her latest work is Mistress of Purity.​
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​Please tell us a little about yourself.
I’m an Australian author of Historical erotic romances set in outback towns of Northern Australia between 1850 and 1898. 

Tell us about your latest book.
Mistress of Purity was released in August 2015.  The plot of the story tells about when Gareth obeyed his father’s widow’s request for him to return to Sarina to collect his inheritance.  Never could he have imagined he’d find her to be the same woman he’d loved so passionately a few weeks before.  The secrets that Gareth unveils upon returning to his late father’s estate become a near obsession to him, revealing to him not only the truth about Prue, but also the man his father had truly been.
 
What do you have coming out in the future?
Passions in the Dust will be out in March 2016.  It’s about a wealthy station owner who orders a mail order bride only to find her to be the lover he had left back in England.  Together they are faced with cattle rustlers, scrub fires, poisoned cattle and a fiancé out for revenge.
 
Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
Stand alone
 
Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
I write romances because I love a happy ending!  My own particular brand of romance is uniquely Australian, using actual historical place names and some of my own personal family history.  The romance is driven by suspense and mystery, as well as scandals and the occasional mention of remedies or legends belonging to the Australian Aboriginals.
 
Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
So far I only write romance
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Prue had seen something the night her father was murdered – something that would forever change her life… 

…She had seen something that would continue to haunt her and follow her wherever she went. 

When she had married the Earl of Malloy, Prue had hoped to be able to hide under his name and at his out of town estate. 

What she had not thought was to become his son’s MISTRESS OF PURITY. 

Gareth had sworn never to return to his father’s estate, not to the life he had once thought to have there. 

He had hoped that the man he had grown in to was no longer hoping to find the love of a woman he knew could not possibly exist. 

What Gareth had not wanted was to find his comfort in the arms of his father’s young wife…a woman he knew was hiding far more than just one secret from him. 
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Click image for explanation.
find it on amazon
find it on red sage
From where do you draw your inspiration?
Mostly the history of mine or my husband’s ancestors.
 
Do you ever base your characters on real people in your life?
Yes quite a few have been based on people I have known or am related to.
 
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
Usually just relaxing and spending time with my family.
 
What was your road to publishing like? Tell us about it.
I was first published way back in 1996 just after I graduated High School, but the company went bankrupt.  I was then again offered a contract in 2008 but that company also went bust.  Red Sage Publishing contracted me in 2012 and I’ve been with them ever since, having just been offered a fifth contract.
 
Have you joined any writer’s groups?
I am currently a member of both the Romance Writers of America and Australia.
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Click image for explanation.
Forthcoming
March 
2016
What is the hardest part of the writing process for you? 
Writing a synopsis – it’s like pulling teeth for me.
 

What is the easiest part of the writing process for you? 
Usually the basic plot outline.
 
What is your preferred writing environment? 
I would say quiet but having a combined family of nine children doesn’t always allow for that.
 
Do you have a careful plan when plotting your stories or do you just go with the flow?
I usually have a list of ideas and a few written paragraphs involving certain dialogue but it’s all subject to change with me.  Plots change constantly until I think it’s finally right.
 
What is your favorite quote?
“Was it hard?" I ask. “Letting go?"

“Not as hard as holding on to something that wasn't real.”
― Lisa Schroeder

 
Wild Card Question.
As an author, what is the one question that you wish people would ask you, but no one ever has and what would your answer be to that question?

 
If you could have been the original author of any book, what would it have been and why?
To Kill a Mockingbird because it has never been out of print.
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Deborah Camp Interview

11/30/2015

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The guest author for today on Interviews with Dante is Deborah Camp. She is a writer of Thriller/Suspense/Paranormal Romance and she has also write Western Historical Romances​. Her latest work is Through His Heart. The third novel in the Mind's Eye series.
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Please tell us a little about yourself.
I’m Deborah Camp, author of more than 45 published novels, both contemporary and historical. My first book was published in 1979 by Simon & Shuster. I live in Oklahoma with my significant other and a bunch of sweet dogs.
I’m a charter member of the Romance Writers of America and I’m a member of The Authors Guild, Oklahoma Writers Federation, Inc, and the Tulsa Night Writers.
When I’m not writing or reading, I’m usually volunteering with the Animal Rescue Foundation in Tulsa, rescuing pets from kill shelters and finding great new homes for them.
I’ve made my living as a writer my whole adult life, so I’m very blessed.


Tell us about your latest book.
My most current book is the third novel in my Mind’s Eye series, which features psychic detectives Trudy Tucker and Levi Wolfe. Each book is stand-alone as far as the mystery goes, but the relationship between Trudy and Levi continues to evolve throughout the series. THROUGH HIS HEART deals with the kidnapping of a child – a step-sister Levi has never met – and Trudy’s insistence in helping find the girl, even though it means dealing with Levi’s father, John Comfort. The Rev. Comfort is an evangelical TV minister who rejected Levi when he was a child, which threw Levi into a world of mental and physical torture. He hates his father and his father has no use for him, so being in the same town together is explosive for both of them.
Caught in this tangled web of deceit and hatred, Trudy and Levi try to find the girl using their psychic abilities while Levi tries not to spin out of control and into the emotionally charged chaos he’s tried so hard to avoid.

Levi and Trudy approach their work from different angles because Levi can commune with the deceased or victims of crimes and Trudy can get into the criminal’s mind and see what he sees, hear what he hears, etc. They make a formidable team.


What do you have coming out in the future?
My work-in-process is a western set in Texas, two years after the end of the Civil War. It’s a love story, dealing primarily with the aftermath of life after the war and the festering hatred, animosity, and fear most people struggled with at that time. It’s a story of redemption and how men and women deal differently with the trauma of war. Its scheduled release is in early 2016.
After that, I’ll write #4 in the Mind’s Eye series.

 
The Mind’s Eye series is different from most because it has something for everyone – romance, hot sex, suspense, danger, intrigue, and paranormal. I think I’m successful in weaving all those elements into each book. From the reviews I’ve received, readers are pleasantly surprised by how much they love the books and the series. Readers who generally don’t like to read paranormal books like them because they are more down to earth and they have complex and interesting main characters. Levi is smoking hot and Trudy is a strong woman who can handle all his complexities and hotness!
 
I focused on Levi in the first three books of the series. In the next three, I plan to focus more on Trudy and her own unique psychic talents. She’s new at the detective game and still struggling with how to use her gifts. She’s always been afraid of them and tried to deny them, but now she is attempting to embrace and control them.

Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
 My book is part of a series (The Mind's Eye series), but it is stand-alone in that a murder is solved in each one. The relationship between the characters continues throughout the series.

Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
 I write romances because that's what I like to read. My Mind's Eye series is a bit different because the psychic detectives work both "sides." She can see through the killer's eyes and he can commune with the deceased crime victims.
 
Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
I write romances, both contemporary and historical.
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“Sending you an SOS.” 
When psychic Trudy Tucker hears this plaintive cry in her mind and then connects psychically with a little girl’s kidnapper, she is drawn to a small town in Missouri where everyone is suspect – including herself and her lover, celebrated psychic detective Levi Wolfe. As she and Levi work to sort through whom and what to trust and struggle with horrors that hit too close to their hearts, an innocent life hangs in the balance.
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​Click image for explanation.
find it on amazon
​Do you base your characters on real people?
I have done this. In the Mind’s Eye series, a character named Quintara is based on my writer mentor who ran a Writers Roundtable. She was quite a character and loved by many writers in Oklahoma. Mostly, my characters are a combination of people I’ve met or watched from a distance. Writers are observers.
 
What was your road to publishing like?
Although I have a Bachelor’s degree in journalism and I was a newspaper reporter for a few years, I knew that writing a mass market novel wasn’t the same thing. So, I took classes in novel writing at the local junior college and I joined local writing groups and critique groups. My first novel went through a critique group before I submitted it to a literary agent or a publisher. It was contracted by Simon & Shuster for their new romance line called Silhouette. Shortly after that, I signed with my first literary agent. I would say that my road to publishing was methodical and I approached it as a business I had to learn before I hung out shingle.
 
What authors inspire your writing?
I admire many authors and add new ones to the list every year. LaVyrle Spencer, Sandra Brown, Nora Roberts, Janet Dailey, Mary Stewart, C.D. Reiss, E.L. James, and Abigail Barnette are a few that have influenced me as a writer and thrilled me as a reader.
 
What is the hardest part of writing for you?
The hardest part is after a book is written and I have to find ways to let readers know about it and get them to place reviews of it online! That never gets easier and it’s very time-consuming and expensive.
 

What is the easiest part?
Dreaming up the plot and creating the character profiles. That’s always fun.
 
What is my preferred writing environment?
I like to write at home. I carry my laptop all over the place and plop down and write.
 
What influences my writing?
I like to hang my plot on a lesson or moral judgment. I don’t want to pound readers over the head with it, but I expect them to “get it” by the end of the novel. In the Mind’s Eye series, the overall lesson is to not judge people prematurely or ignorantly. In the western I’m writing now the lesson is that hatred is learned and passed on. Humans are not born hating.
I’m influenced by the wonderful people around me – my friends and my lovely, gorgeous, sexy, very own hero. We’ve been together, off and on, since I was a senior in high school and he was an older, experienced, guy with a “bad boy” reputation.  We’re definitely “on” now, but we have a long-distance relationship. I live in Oklahoma and he lives in Connecticut. Thanks to flying, texting, e-mails, and phone calls, we make it work. We hardly ever go longer than two weeks without seeing each other.

 
Do you plot or go with the flow?
I used to plot, chapter by chapter, and sometimes I still do. However, with the Mind’s Eye series, I go with the flow. I know the mystery and how it will be resolved, but I don’t know all the subplots and key scenes. So far, it’s working for me on this series.
 
Advice for new writers:
I taught novel writing and romance writing for more than 20 years at a local college, so I think I can speak to this with some confidence. I’m proud to say that several of my students are published romance writers now.
Do your homework! Study the books you love to read as if they were textbooks. Underline sections you love and ask yourself why you love them, why they’re successful, what the author did to pull your heartstrings or make you gasp. Concentrate on a good plot and don’t rely on coincidences and contrived outcomes. The conflict has to be real and wrenching and both of your main characters should wish they could extricate themselves, but they can’t because of realistic and believable reasons. If it’s something that they could deal with in a conversation or by answering a few questions, then it’s not a good conflict. Too often, I see flimsy plots that rely on a misunderstanding that could be cleared up if the heroine or hero simply questioned the other person instead of flying off into a rage or pouting.
Hire a copy-editor and a proofer! Don’t rely on good friends or relatives to tell you they love your book and didn’t find anything wrong with it. Invest in a professional editor and proof reader. They are worth every cent you pay them! Listen to their advice – especially the editor. You don’t have to make every change suggested, but listen and compromise when possible.
When you’re just starting out, find a good critique group, preferably one that consists of both published and unpublished writers who are writing the in the same genre as you. Check with local writing groups for one. If you can’t find one, start your own! Again, you don’t have to take everyone’s advice, but if several people in the group have the same problem with something in your book, you need to change it. Don’t love your book so much that you think every word and every scene is necessary. Rewriting is where you find the real gold.
 

What is your favorite quote?
Don’t wait for your ship to come in. Swim for it!
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T. M. Cromer Interview

11/25/2015

 
The guest author for today on Interviews with Dante is T. M. Cromer. She is a writer of Contemporary Romance. Her latest work is Finding You.
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Please tell us a little about yourself.
This is my least favorite part of an interview. I have a difficult time talking about myself. Stealing from my online bio…
While I’m originally from New Jersey, I spent most of my growing up years in Flagler Beach & Palm Coast, Florida. More recently, I relocated with my husband to  Illinois where I met and fell in love with my true love, Tinkerbell. My hubby has come to understand she ranks first in my affections, as I rank in hers. He’s cool with it. :)
Job titles I currently hold: Author, Professional Waster-of-Time, Hammock Mounting
Safety Instructor, Margarita Mixologist and Spoiler of Dogs.
On a serious note: Until now, "A jack of all trades and master of none" best described
me. Through all my career changes, my husband would always encourage me to turn
back to my real love, writing. Because I've always felt it is important to be true to
yourself, I did. Over the years, I’ve taken writing classes and have now decided to
put what I’ve learned to good use.
Sammy's story was my very first experience in writing a full length novel. I'm
extremely proud of what I've created. It is my hope that this will be everyone’s new
go-to book, that they will want to read it again and again.


Tell us about your latest book.
FINDING YOU (Sammy’s Story) is a romance which crosses the border into paranormal without seeming to. Sammy suffers with premonitions. These come into play during the story. This book also has enough suspense and drama in it to make it a little more than the standard cut and dried contemporary romance out there today. But, ultimately, fans want a happy ending, and I think they will be pleased. Will it turn
out the way they want? I’m not telling. I will say, my ARC reviews are excellent and I
couldn’t be happier. I have to laugh because some of the best reviews were from people who would never have picked it up if they thought it contained anything resembling the paranormal. They loved it and can’t wait for my next book.


What do you have coming out in the future?
My next project is WHEN I SAW YOU AGAIN. This book is the story of Sammy’s sister,
Margie. Once again, it will teeter on the edge of the paranormal without seeming too
out there for standard contemporary readers. I have ideas for seven additional books
with outlines already drawn up for two of them. It appears I am going to be one busy
little beaver for the next two to three years running.


Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
Technically, it is a stand-alone in that if anyone wanted to read just this book, it
concludes in the final scene. However, it is part of a series in that the other family
members of the main character will have books of their own. Reading the books in
order will enhance the experience for the reader, but it isn’t necessary to enjoy any
or all of the books.


Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
Even as a small child, I loved the idea of love. Around the age of fifteen years old, I read my first romance. I haven’t stopped reading since. When I was twenty-five, I thought “Yeah, I can do that!” and I started scribbling stories in my free time or at night when I was unable to sleep. I think when it becomes such an obsession, you have to go with it. You have no choice.
As far as what makes mine special? I’m not sure. Maybe because I feel life isn’t black and white? There are many grey areas. As such, they reflect in my stories and make them appear real. I also write flawed characters. Sammy is probably as quirky as they get. She has no filter, has a tendency to be stubborn, and laughs at inappropriate times. We won’t talk about her temper. However, she is likable, which is the most important aspect of the character. I think she is relatable.


Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
Romance will always be my main genre. Will I branch out? Maybe. I imagine that as I
become more comfortable with plotting and creating characters I will want to explore the darker side of writing. Maybe create a mystery or two. I am a fan of Mary Higgins Clark, but I won’t pretend to have that skill level yet.
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Samantha and Michael had the perfect relationship, until one day they didn’t. In a devastating turn of events, Michael leaves on a business trip and never returns home. It takes two years, a stay in a mental health facility and a new career for Samantha to rebuild her life. She even has a new love interest. But when a business trip to the city where Michael disappeared brings a chance encounter, Samantha starts to question what really happened that day so long ago. Could a stranger be the key to discovering the answers she needs to find Michael? Forced to delve into the mystery of her soulmate's disappearance or accept the new love that life has offered her, Samantha faces a difficult decision.
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Find an autographed copy here
From where do you draw your inspiration?
Real life. FINDING YOU was based on the idea of what would happen if my husband
went out of town and never returned. I had nightmares after he left on a business
trip, and my imagination took off from there.


Do you ever base your characters on real people in your life?
Yes. I tell people Sammy is based on me about twenty years ago. She does things that
I may or may not have done. I refuse to incriminate myself. Michael is based on my
husband around that same time frame. The supporting characters are all loosely
based on people I know. Oddly enough, at this point in my life, I am more like
Sammy’s sister, Annie. I’ve mellowed with age. Margie has hints of me as well. She
can be very commanding when she needs to be. Ugh! Does this mean I have multiple
personality disorder? I think it is the writer’s curse. There are a lot of people living
in my head who want their own story.


What authors inspire your writing?
There are too many too count. However, authors like Jude Devereaux, Christina
Dodd, Julia Quinn, Judith McNaught and Jill Barnett have all created amazing
romances that have, at one time or another, appealed to me. Then there are the
authors like Erma Bombeck and Janet Evanovich who’s ability to make one liners
seem effortless have me envious. I would also love to channel authors like Robert
Ludlum and John Grisham for intrigue.


How have your real life experiences influenced your writing?
Twenty years ago, I doubt I could have been able to write stories as deep and
emotional as the ones I create today. For example, losing my parents and various
loved ones over the years, has taught me about loss and the stages of grief we all go
through. But each person experiences grief on their own terms. Some people find it
easier to let go than others. The same can be said of love. Having been with the
same man for over twenty-five years of my life has taught me love is about
compromise, and at times, getting out of your own way and putting someone else’s
needs above your own. It makes for stronger characters when they can grow through
a story as I have done in my own life.


What do you like to do when you are not writing?
Genealogy. I have spent endless hours in the pursuit of dead ancestors. I’ve even
stolen some of the names and used them for characters. I felt in some small way I
was honoring those who have long since passed.
I also love to spend my time on the water with my kayak. I prefer a lake, but if it
rains enough, I will use a puddle in the road. I’m not proud. The rest of my time is
spent catering to my dog, Tink, and laying in my hammock dreaming the day away.​


What was your road to publishing like? Tell us about it.
Hell. No, I’m not kidding. It’s been pretty rough. Editing became my worst enemy and
the thing that I needed most. I’ve never been that person who could quote from a
book until I had to read my own 136 times to try to remove all the typos and
continuity issues. Now I can probably quote it front and backwards. As far as the
marketing aspect of publishing, I am having a bit of fun with that. Looking for
creative new ways to reach readers challenges me, and I feel I may be doing fairly
well with it.


How did you come up with the title of your book?
There are scenes in the book that refer to the title. It wasn’t anything profound. It
just fit.


Do you read romance or do you prefer other genres?
I am an avid romance reader. However, there are times I need a break from it and
switch to a genre like murder-mystery or a good spy thriller. I’ve even been known to
read a YA novel on occasion. They aren’t my favs, but I believe in diversity.

What is your absolute favorite book or books and why is it special to you?
Jill Barnett wrote a book called Dreaming. I connected with that book on a very
visceral level. Many times in my life I felt inadequate, like the main character, Letty.
In the book, no matter what she seemed to do, it doesn’t turn out right. But she
keeps trying, even though she’s accident prone and gets her heart broken time and
again, she never loses faith. She is an eternal optimist. That’s me, the eternal
optimist.


What celebrity would you chose to play the main character(s) in the movie rendition of your book?
I would have to say Mila Kunis. Not because she looks like the image I have of Sammy
in my head, but because she has played spunky characters in the past and does it
well.


Have you joined any writer’s groups?
Not really. I created a writer’s group for friends on Facebook to discuss their work if
they so choose. I don’t know if writing groups would be a good thing or a bad thing for me right now. In all truthfulness, I don’t have the time to devote to a
group. I would rather spend my time writing than discussing my writing. I imagine
after some time has passed and the newness of all this wears off, and when I am not
putting in long hours, I will feel the need to connect with other authors more than I
have. I’ve been pretty lucky to have professionals willing to help me with
constructive criticism and publishing hurdles. For that, I am grateful.


Have you won any awards for your writing?
I’ve just entered my first novel in the Writer’s Digest contest under the genre fiction
category. I’ll let you know how it goes.


What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
Without a doubt editing. It’s been suggested a writer should have three separate
editors. One for plot and character development, and two for grammar and spelling.
I agree. I failed to do that with my first novel, and I believe it took me longer than it
needed to in order to produce a quality product. The problem for me is that I know
what I want and expect a sentence to say. As a result, I read it how I see it in my
mind. I miss typos and misspelled words for that reason. Words that spellcheck
wouldn’t normally catch such as bland in place of blade and rain in place of rein or
reign became my nemeses (Yes, I did check the spelling and nemeses is the plural for
nemesis. No typo there.). It has been a learning experience, and while it has been
difficult at times, I welcome the learning experience. It will make me a better
author in the end, or at least I hope.


What is the easiest part of the writing process for you?
Plot. I have no problem with twist and turns. I can see the final outcome in my mind
and then create the winding path to get there. I think readers of FINDING YOU will
find that to be true.


Which of your characters is your favorite and why?
Michael was by far my favorite. He has an easy charm and sweet disposition, at least
until he gets riled. Laughing and enjoying life are part of his DNA. Every beta reader
and recipient of the ARCs has fallen in love with him. It is impossible not to. It
doesn’t hurt that he is sexy as hell and knows how to make sweet love to a
woman. ;p


Who or what are your inspirations/influences?
Life is my inspiration. As a writer, I tend to study every person I meet. I look deeper
into their soul, past all the surface fluff. I look for the motivation behind their
actions. It inspires me to write characters with depths and who have hidden agendas.


What is your preferred writing environment?
It doesn’t matter as long as I have few distractions. I can write on the front porch in
my adirondack chair, in my hammock with a pad and pencil, in my kayak, or at my
desk in my office. Those are all my favorite places to be, with the exception of the
office, and I love to write. It is my belief that if you have a story that refuses to stay
bottled up, you will find a way to tell it regardless of environment. Is it better to
have a place where you are comfortable and that feeds your creativity? Sure it is.
But I’m not picky. Just sit me in front of a computer and I’m happy.


How would you describe your writing style?
Spastic? I write like I think. Some phrases are long and drawn out while some are
short and to the point. There are others that are fragmented. All of my readers to
date actually like my style. They say it is more in line with how they think. I’m glad
to see I’m not the only one out there whose mind has no discernible thought pattern.

Do you have a careful plan when plotting your stories or do you just go with the flow?
Both. I try not to be rigid with a plot. I have a general map of where the story needs
to go, but there are times when my mind goes off-roading. It isn’t always pretty. Yet,
I’ve found it works. There were times I found Sammy in a situation and wondered
how the heck she got there. I would then find a way to write her back on track. It
added to the story, and I was happier for it. To my way of thinking, it is meant to be.


With many publishing routes available today, which felt the most reliable to you when it came to the many choices?
I chose the self-publishing route. I dislike authority (cough, cough, Sammy, cough,
cough) and shun the traditional. It allows me a freedom to create and publish on my
schedule. The drawback is you have to be all things; author, editor, publisher, and
marketing expert. It is a LOT of work. Worth it eighteen hour days when it is crunch
time? We’ll see. I hope so.


When did you know you truly wanted to give writing a shot?
I enjoyed writing in school and actually scribbled short stories in a notebook. It
wasn’t until I was about twenty-five that I realized it was what I wanted to do with
my life. However, life had other plans for me. And now, a million years later, life
handed me back my dream. I grabbed it with both hands and said, “Thank you!”


What is your favorite quote?
“Why Johnny Ringo, you look like somebody just walked over your grave.” Did I say I
was a huge Tombstone fan? Yeah, sorry it isn’t something more profound, but I loved
the humor behind that movie scene.


Do you have any advice for other writers and what is it?
Most people would say “Just write!” and, while I agree with that, I think the better
advice would be to plan your story. To think about what you are trying to get across
and how you want your characters to be. Set writing goals for every day; 1, 2 or even
3 thousand words per day. Be original. Don’t be afraid to ask questions of other
published authors. Be sure you are open to constructive criticism. No one person
knows everything. If we listen, we can learn enough to make us good. A few lucky
ones will learn to be great.


Wild Card Question.
As an author, what is the one question that you wish people would ask you, but no one ever has and what would your answer be to that question?


How would you like your million dollar advance paid, check or direct deposit?
Direct deposit will be great. Thanks!
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Casey Lehman Interview

11/20/2015

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The guest author for today on Interviews with Dante is Casey Lehman. He is a writer of Sci/Fi/Fantasy/Anthro Romance. His latest work A Second Chance, coauthored with Ronald Steven Lessiter, is the first book in the TalonFrye Chronicles.
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Please tell us a little about yourself.
I am an avid dragon, anime romance fanfiction lover.  I suffer from aspergers, tourettes, depression, bipolar disorder and have slight PTSD from certain incidents in my past.  Although I am hesitant to spout the technicalities behind how this series began, I will say my co-author and I are still in the process of writing our series.  I feel D&D (Dungeons and Dragons) is a large inspiration for my work nowadays.
 
Tell us about your latest book.
The actual world in which The TalonFyre Chronicles, Book 1: A Second Chance, was originally based on the Legend of Spyro world, but I desired to pull this kind of idea and base it on Dungeons and Dragons instead.  In the the first book of the series, the odd and very dense 19-year old lava-blooded dragon mercenary known as TalonFyre meets a (seemingly)22-year old light dragon by the name of Flare.  Flare promptly  introduces him to his violence-loving, extremely tomboyish and exceptionally attractive 17-year old daughter, Hikari.  She almost instantly falls for him, despite his unromantic attitude and extreme unintelligence.  This book is about their struggles, the healing power of love, redemption, and the fact that you don’t have to be the same species to fall in love(see the two of the four side-characters, Ultimar and Mian).
 
What do you have coming out in the future?
The TalonFyre Chronicles, Books 2 and 3, The TalonFyre Epochs(a darker and more adult series taking place after the chronicles) and War of the Third Demon Parts 1, 2 and 3, the latter most being, the darker, complex-worded prequel to the series/history of the world in which The TalonFyre Chronicles takes place.  It will have multiple D&D-like qualities, a semi-large cast,  and may cause controversy due to the nature and traditions of said world.
 
Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
As stated before, both the Chronicles and the Epochs are part of the same series.  War of the Third Demon is a spinoff/prequel.
 
Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
It’s something that hasn’t been done that much before in an actual book series.  An anthro-romance novel about dragons.  What makes it truly interesting is that my aunt actually sometimes forgot they were dragons, but instead humans due to the fact that they have almost no bestial qualities in their personality whatsoever.  This, coupled with nearly zero instinct, causes it to be somewhat unique.  I hate to give spoilers, but later books will delve deep into interspecies romances as well.  Even with this, they are all still fully-sentient species.
 

Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
The TalonFyre Chronicles will mostly be romance, but will have multiple adventures qualities in later books.  War of the Third Demon will most likely be as follows - Part 1: Romance/ HurtComfort/Drama.  Part 2: Politics/Adventure/Romance/Drama/HurtComfort/War.  Part 3: War/Drama/Adventure/Romance/HurtComfort/Politics.
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TalonFyre, a 19-year old former mercenary of war, is thrust into a life he never imagined he would live when he is awoken from an dormant state by a light dragon named Flare. This light dragon introduces him to his 17-year old daughter by the name of Hikari. This dragoness might just make his life complete, but will he be able to cope? Will his insecurity and past experience allow him to consider being with her? Even more so, will mercenary history even allow him to keep this life? Only time will tell.
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​From where do you draw your inspiration?
Originally Legend of Spyro/Animes.  Now it’s D&D/Animes/Dr. Who and multiple other series as well as my own imagination to be more original.
 
Do you ever base your characters on real people in your life?
Some characters are based on myself/others as well as their situations, albeit sometimes mixed and/or exaggerated.
 
What authors inspire your writing?
Piers Anthony, J.R.R. Tolken, Emily Roddda, Clare Keating and multiple fanfiction writers
 
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
Play video games, read fanfictions and watch anime
 
What was your road to publishing like? Tell us about it.
It was… interesting.  I was originally a fanfiction writer, but retired when I realized that it wasn’t something that could make money or a real impact on lives.  The TalonFyre Chronicles, although originally Spyro fanfiction, the world was completely revamped into a D&D-style with a multitude of species.  The Golems in War of the Third Demons will be basted of the personifications of different emotions/situations, etc. from mythology (I.E. Thanatos, Eros, Styx, Hypnos, Aergia and others)
 
How did you come up with the title of your book?
The TalonFyre Chronicles seemed to the a basic yet efficient name for the series.  The subtitle “A Second Chance” is due to TalonFyre having the decision to either give up his mercenary past or continue on the road to the destruction of his body, mind, heart and soul.
 
What is your absolute favorite book or books and why is it special to you?
Romance above all.  I really don’t know why.  Maybe it’s because I was always more feminine than masculine.
 
What celebrity would you chose to play the main character(s) in the movie rendition of your book?
TalonFyre: J.S. Gilbert’s Sweet Tooth Voice from Twisted Metal without the distortion as per the desire of my co-author.
Hikari: Anna Kingsley
Flare: Chris Niosi
Angel: Rachael Lillis
Ultimar: Vic Mignogna
Mian: Imogen Fox


Have you joined any writer’s groups?
GoodReads and a few DeviantArt Groups
 
Have you won any awards for your writing?
No, and I don’t expect to yet.
 
What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
From a writer’s perspective, The TalonFyre Chronices would be translating the dialogue into a book format and coming up with the emotions behind the characters.  As for War of the Third Demon, that would be researching the effects of the characters’ traumas and mental problems.  From a mental perspective, any childbirth scenes.
 
What is the easiest part of the writing process for you?
The TalonFyre Chronicles: Taking the dialogue into the story.  War of the Third Demon: Coming up with ideas for species.
 
Which of your characters is your favorite and why?
Ultimar, because of his job, soft, kind heart, selflessness, and redemption story.
 
Who or what are your inspirations/influences?
Ronald Steven Lessiter, my co-author, Shalone Howard A.K.A. ShaloneSK on DeviantArt for the original designs of the dragon characters, Clare Keating A.K.A. echodusk on DeviantArt, Montecristo709 on fanfiction.net for his religious influences and ideas, animes/movies (mainly Shonen Jump, Monster Rancher and Studio Ghibli), multiple video games, Gary Gygax/Dave Arneson, Dragon City and other games like it, Dragon Heart, Legend of Spyro, Lord of The Rings and some histoical events
 
What is your preferred writing environment?
And here’s where my oddball personality comes out - FIND THE COMPUTER ROOM!!!
 
How would you describe your writing style?
The TalonFyre Chronicles is more common and laid back, while War of the Third Demon is complex-worded, semi-scientific, and makes elaborate comparatives.  Both have a very feminine style of writing, but the femininity is much more prominent War of the Third Demon.
 
Do you have a careful plan when plotting your stories or do you just go with the flow?
The dialogue for The TalonFyre Chronicles is pre-written, but for War of the Third Demon I have very few things pre-planned.  In short, for the latter I “go with the flow” more than a stereotypical laid-back surfer in a 90’s movie.
 
With many publishing routes available today, which felt the most reliable to you when it came to the many choices?
Amazon.  Echodusk told me it would be the best route to self-publish, and since she had published novella on there, I trusted her judgement.
 
When did you know you truly wanted to give writing a shot?
That’s a hard question.  In honesty I was always a good writer, but I stopped in high-school.  I think writing TalonFyre: Portrait of a Merc (the original fanficion.net version of The TalonFyre Chronicles) was actually something that got me back into writing.  It’s a passion now.
 
What is your favorite quote?
“Ultimate power ultimately corrupts”
 
Do you have any advice for other writers and what is it?
If you want to write, I suggest you look at the more professionally-written books.  If you have no interest in original stories, go to fanfiction.net or DeviantArt and read some of the few well-written stories of your preffered fandom.  If you truly want original ideas, you may want to find a D&D group, as the games you play will give you an extreme amount of inspiration, especially if your DM(Dungeon Master) is creative enough to make his own storyline and possibly even classes/abilities.  In fact, you and your friends can actually make a book out of your game if this is the case - just give credit where credit is due.
 
Wild Card Question.
As an author, what is the one question that you wish people would ask you, but no one ever has and what would your answer be to that question?

 
Do you think interspecies romances are wrong?
I am going to give an answer and then propose a series of questions - For my answer, I feel it depends if the species are both fully-sentient and the conditions of the romance.  Technically speaking, depending on the species it can be somewhat creepy.  However for my question we must ask ourselves this - what is the measure of man?  Do we consider “sentient” to be only applied to humans?  If so, is it because of ignorance, or is it because we have never met a specie with our reasoning and intelligence?  If we do, will be see it as “human” or “sentient” or will said ignorance blind us to the friendship or possibly loves that could come of accepting them into our fold?  If this world were to be populated with other sentient species, would it be for better or worse?  Would it cause humans to see that race is nothing but an illusion of physical traits?  I, for one, would welcome new sentient species into our world, providing they did not come to kill us, but rather live with us.  If they saw us as beneath them due to their power or technology, yet restrained themselves from doing horrible things due to it, I would see that as amazing restraint.  If even one saw that we are, in the end, equal, I would see that as amazing strength.  Who’s to say that any sentient species is better than another?  It would be the same as saying one race of humans is better, which is untrue, despite those who think otherwise.  In the end, are we not all mere “humans” of the same cosmos?
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Ash Night Interview

11/15/2015

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The guest author for today on Interviews with Dante is Ash Night. She is a writer of Young Adult Paranormal Romance. Her latest work Embracing Shadows is the first in the Embracing Shadows series.
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​Please tell us a little about yourself.
I always thought I’d end up in Neverland with Peter Pan, and when that didn’t happen, I made my own version of Neverland and just never stopped. I love camping and love walking in the woods, especially in the fall. I grew up outside a small town in Wisconsin. I’m the oldest of four kids and I started writing when I was eleven.
 
Tell us about your latest book.
My latest book is about love coming in more than one form.
 
What do you have coming out in the future?
I have the sequel to Embracing Shadows coming out early next year and a short story about my favorite orange-haired vampire. I also plan to work on a few random projects as well.
 
Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
Embracing Shadows is a series. My first novel, Juliet’s Lullaby, is a stand-alone told from Topaz’s POV but is sort of a spin-off of Embracing Shadows.
 
Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
My first experience with romance was watching English-dubbed anime (Japanese cartoons with English-speaking voice actors). When I was young, I watched an anime called Rurouni Kenshin. I had a huge crush on the main male character and was envious of how sweet he was with the main female character. Since then, I still love sappy anime romances, but I’ve become more realistic. My brand of romance is special because, although my vampires are from the days of when men controlled their women, most of them believe in change and are willing to be considerate of what the opposite gender wants. I also believe in females who can hold a scene on their own and not have to always depend on a guy.
 
Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
I’m hoping to branch out a bit and write other types of romances, other than paranormal, but I think I’ll stick to romance.
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​When I was ten, my dad died. Rather than deal with my horrified screaming, my mom had me committed. After she let me out, the nightmares got worse. The day I met him the nightmares stopped. What will I do now that he’s gone?

She knows now. She wants to be with me. Is it right? No. She deserves better. I love her. I just can’t be human for her.

Erin Sapphire hasn’t always been a happy, go-lucky teen. Five years ago, she was in a mental hospital after losing her dad. After her mom let her come home, her mind was in a constant fog thanks to all the medication she was prescribed. Until she meets the handsome, soft-spoken Aubrey Asher. Now a junior in high school, she and Aubrey are best friends. As they grow closer, Aubrey gives in to desire and shows Erin his spine-chilling world of blood and secrets. Despite her knowing, he knows he’ll have to leave soon. Is Erin finally strong enough to handle her nightmares on her own? Will Aubrey be able to sacrifice her happiness to keep her safe?
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What authors inspire your writing?
Amelia Atwater-Rhodes was a big influence on me. She even inspired my pen name. I even got the chance to tell her on Facebook how much she inspired me and it was wonderful being able to actually tell her how much she helped me grow as a writer.
 
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
I share my love of anime with my little sister Brooke so we can waste an entire day watching our favorite anime, One Piece. I’m very family-oriented. On the weekends, I’m usually babysitting at least one of my ten cousins. I also have an extensive movie collection, including seasons of my favorite shows. I love to go camping. I love everything about nature. I also love video games, especially RPGs.
 
What was your road to publishing like? Tell us about it.
When I was fourteen, I had a teacher who believed in my writing. She also knew I had trouble in a class due to my mild Cerebral Palsy (trouble with fine motor skills) so she changed my schedule so I would have forty-five minutes free every day instead of having to take that class. I used that time to research how to get published. At that time, I used to think the only way of getting published was to get an agent.
 
I wrote to agents and got a handful of rejection letters. A few didn’t even write back. By the time I was a sophomore in high school, I was getting frustrated. In my mind, I was supposed to be famous by now with everyone reading my writing. Through my author page on Facebook I was introduced to some very nice authors who were self-published and they seemed very happy.
 
Now, right I am. I believe I made the right decision. Sure, being an indie author has its drawbacks. I have to do all the promotion myself. I have to do all the editing or pay a pretty penny for someone to do it for me. But I wouldn’t trade it for the world.
 
I love being able to have control of what covers go on my books. I love that I can schedule my own time instead of being told where I’m going next. Most of all, I love being able to have time to interact with my readers and other authors. The community is so welcoming. I love being surrounded by such positive people, and, to me, that outweighs every single drawback.

 
What is your absolute favorite book or books and why is it special to you?
The Den of Shadows series by Amelia Atwater-Rhodes is one of my favorites. One story in the series, specifically Demon in my View, is very special to me because it had a very profound effect on me. I love the writing style, the characters, the setting. Her vampires had a unique human-like quality to them that I loved. Interview with the Vampire, Twilight, and the Vampire Diaries series are also some of my favorites.
 
What celebrity would you chose to play the main character(s) in the movie rendition of your book?
I would have Kelan Lutz play my character Aubrey Asher because I loved his performance as Emmett Cullen. Robert Pattinson would be great to act as Topaz Tylers because I think he could pull off Topaz’s goofy personality while perfectly portraying his darker moments. Ian Somerhalder would be absolutely perfect for playing Alex Asher because Alex and Damon Salvatore have similar personality traits.
 
What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
Editing. I hate it. I also hate that once I start, I have a hard time stopping until I’m finished. I noticed I tend to be a little crabby during this time so, if I’m editing, there better be a good reason for someone to interrupt.
 
Which of your characters is your favorite and why?
I have three I could not possibly choose between. My characters Aubrey Asher, Alex Asher, and Topaz Tylers are my favorites. They’ve been with me almost my entire life. I love them equally, but for different reasons.
 
What is your preferred writing environment?
I love writing in my living room, but I can really write anywhere as long as it’s quiet or if I have music.
 
How would you describe your writing style?
My writing is character-driven and most of my characters have an internal problem that the other main character tries to help fix.
 
Do you have a careful plan when plotting your stories or do you just go with the flow?
I have used outlines twice in my life and twice I stopped and just started writing. I’m a very hands-on person. If I have a character pop into my head, I want that character to talk and the fastest way is to sit in front of a blank word document, turn the music up loud, and just get lost in it. It’s the most powerful feeling in the world.
 
When did you know you truly wanted to give writing a shot?
I knew the day I handed my sixth grade teacher one of my stories after class, as I did every other day, and she asked, “Have you ever thought of publishing your stories?” At that moment, my life changed forever.
 
Do you have any advice for other writers and what is it?
My advice would be to write whenever you can, even if it’s only a few minutes a day. A novel happens one sentence at a time. Even if it takes your whole life to write it, a novel is something to be proud of. It’s also one of the most incredible experiences I have ever had.

Wild Card Question.
As an author, what is the one question that you wish people would ask you, but no one ever has and what would your answer be to that question?


I would love for people to ask me about the little things about my characters like their favorite food or the type of music they dislike
. When I was first starting out as a writer, I used to fill out character sheets and always had so much fun answering the questions like, “what would be in your character’s fridge right now?”, or “what would your character serve on a first date?”, etc. I love to imagine what my characters would be doing on a typical Tuesday afternoon. Of course, it wouldn’t be much fun for my reader to read about that, but it’s fun to think about.
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Gabriel Constans Interview

11/10/2015

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​The guest author for today on Interviews by Dante is Gabriel Constans. She is an author of Contemporary Erotic Romance. Her latest book is Loving Annalise.
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Please tell us a little about yourself.
Raised in a lumber town in Northern California, where father worked in the mills for over 40 years. Mother worked as a bookkeeper, later remarried and took in 9 foster sisters and 1 foster brother. Biological sister lives and works in same town.
 
Been writing since first publishing an alternative newspaper in high school against the Viet Nam war, for civil rights and sex education, for which I was threatened with arrest. Am practicing parent for 5 adult children (2 adopted) and 4 grandchildren.
 
Tell us about your latest book.
Loving Annalise is based on a true story for a woman I used to work with at hospice. She was kind enough to sit down with me for extensive periods of time and tell me about her life, which I then made into a fictional romance (keeping many of the actual events that took place).
 
What do you have coming out in the future?
I’ve been teaching about mindfulness meditation and mental health for loss and trauma for almost 40 years, and will start to put together a book about it next year.
 
Is your book a stand-alone or a series?
Loving Annalise is a stand-alone romance.
 
Why romance and what makes your particular brand of romance special?
Love and sex are two wonderfully pleasurable aspects of living. Loving Annalise is not only unique, because a lot of it is true, but also because it involves a lot of background and insight into the characters and how Annalise eventually has the courage to stand on her own and be the person she chooses.
 
Is romance the only genre that you write in or do you write in other genres? If so what other genres do you write in?
All of my romances, Loving Annalise, The Last Conception and Buddha’s Wife, have twists and turns that are not usually found in most romantic genres. I also write children’s fiction and non-fiction for adults, that include books about grief, loss and trauma, sexuality and smoothies. I also write screenplays.
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After years of poverty, heartbreak, loss and betrayal, Tomas enters Annalise’s world and shatters the iron casing she’s erected around her heart. Tomas is kind, intelligent, romantic and handsome, but he’s also her husband’s brother!
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From where do you draw your inspiration?
The primary inspiration for my stories come from personal and family experiences and people I admire, some publicly known and other’s close friends and role models (such as my Judo and Jiu-Jitsu teacher Prof. Jane Carr).
 
Do you ever base your characters on real people in your life?
All the time. Observing people I’ve known in the past and present, and situations and families I’ve been involved in through work in hospice, hospital, coroner’s office, prisons, etc., are a big part of what brings my character’s to life and makes them realistic, flawed and believable.
 
What authors inspire your writing?
A variety of writer’s have, and do, inspire me. Bell Hooks, Alice Walker, James Baldwin, Isabelle Allende, Ruth Ozeki, Pat Conroy, Chitra Divakaruna, and Zora Neal Hurston are the first that come to mind.
 
How have your real life experiences influenced your writing?
I’ve been married three times, once when I was very young. Each marriage, and other relationships in-between, have influenced who I am and how I see the world. Each partnership provided emotional, physical and psychological experience that shaped who I am and how I write.
 
What do you like to do when you are not writing?
Some of the things I enjoy are film, reading, playing music, gardening and sculpting stone.
 
How did you come up with the title of your book?
Loving Annalise captures both the reality of other people wanting Annalise, as well as her learning to love herself.
Picture
A successful embryologist (Savarna) must make difficult and life-changing choices. Should she continue devoting her soul to work and party with her girlfriend Magdalena or settle down with Charlemagne (Charly) and have children? If she decides to have children, how and when will they start the process and what will it take to convince her conservative East Indian mother to stop trying to marry her off to a “good man”? If that isn’t enough pressure, throw in the bomb her parents plant when they tell her she MUST have a baby because she is the last in line of a great spiritual teacher who reportedly never had children.​
Picture
Click image for explanation.
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What is your absolute favorite book or books and why is it special to you?
Two of my favorite books are Their Eyes Were Watching God by Nora Zeal Hurston, and Communion by Bell Hooks. The first book is so amazing at portraying an individual, time and place, with which I would never have contact or knowledge, and bringing the character’s to such life, that they felt real. The second, taught me about myself and feminism, in ways I had not imagined.
 
What celebrity would you chose to play the main character(s) in the movie rendition of your book?
For Loving Annalise I’d like Yvonne Maria Schaefer to play Annalise. For The Last Conception, which I’ve written the screenplay for, I’d love to see Archie Punjabi play Savarna.
 

What is the hardest part of the writing process for you?
The most difficult aspect of writing, for me, is editing, and knowing when enough is enough.
 
What is the easiest part of the writing process for you?
The easiest aspect of writing is developing story ideas.
 
Which of your characters is your favorite and why?
One of my favorite character’s is Yasodhara, in Buddha’s Wife. She is left in the throes of grief, and learns how to not only survive and carry on, but also develops great insight and compassion for others.
 
What is your favorite quote?
“Life is what happens to you while your busy making other plans.” John Lennon
 
Wild Card Question.
As an author, what is the one question that you wish people would ask you, but no one ever has and what would your answer be to that question

Nobody has ever asked whether writing has any personal, cultural or societal importance for living and if so, how?
Personally, writing helps me externalize what is going on in my head and heart and have a better perspective. Culturally, writing keeps our history alive and in the consciousness of the human race. Society uses writer’s for information, pleasure and escape; all of which have their place and time.​
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