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Still A Thrill

Thursday, July 21st, 2011

Someone said to me the other day that seeing the covers for my books must be old hat and pretty mundane for me. That’s not true. My first book came out in 2002 and even now, I anticipate each cover. And if I love it, I become hugely excited.

There are a lot of parts of being an author that are still exciting. OMG, seeing your book on the shelves at the bookstore? Or an airport bookstore? Sheer elation. Author copies being delivered to the doorstep. Opening that box and seeing the story you slaved over for months and months printed and bound and looking so pretty? Completely awesome. And every time someone sends me an email telling me they loved my book? Rapture. Seriously. My favorite part is when readers love my book.

None of this excitement has ever faded for me, no matter how many times I’ve experienced it. And I think this is a good thing. If a writer loses the wonder (not just with the writing/editing/revision part, but with the little joys like holding your book for the first time), they’ve lost something intangible that I think affects their work.

Actually, my life philosophy overall is that we have to enjoy moments–big or small. It doesn’t matter if it’s the first time or the tenth time, we have to savor and embrace the good stuff.

Born In Fire

Sunday, July 17th, 2011

Last Sunday I talked about my first Nora Roberts’ book, today, I’m going to talk about my favorite. Born In Fire.

Born In Fire is the la Nora book I reread the most. I just love this story. The heroine is a glass artist who has a tempestuous relationship with her mother. The hero is a delicious Irish art dealer who wants the heroine’s work for his gallery. After he meets her, he wants her, period.

This book isn’t fraught with action. It’s much more about relationships and the characters, but I didn’t miss the adventure. Maggie is a great heroine and definitely full of fire. Rogan is sexy and I can see him as a precursor to Roarke who is the hero in the JD Robb books. There are similarities, but Rogan is his own person.

One of the things I really enjoyed about this book was the characters and how real they were. I honestly felt that if I hopped on a plane, flew to Ireland, and went to the town that I would actually find Maggie, Rogan, and the rest of the cast. This is three-dimensional characterization at its best. But even better? I wished these people were real because I would have loved to hang out with them. I have to settle for rereading the book over and over.

Hot Ice

Sunday, July 10th, 2011

Another of my all-time favorite books is Hot Ice by Nora Roberts. It was actually the first Nora book I read and it made her a must-buy author for me. It took me a long time to pick up all her backlist, but I was late enough finding her that she already had quite a number of books out.

Hot Ice features a hero who’s a thief and an heiress heroine. They meet when he’s on the run from the police and uses her to get away. They end up becoming partners because he has a map to a treasure and she has the money to fund his hunt. But she’s not letting him take off alone, she’s going to be with him every step of the way.

This book had the h/h on the run in the jungle. Now you know one of the reasons why I loved it, right? I have a thing for this setup. :-) But I also liked that the heroine had such a smart mouth. She zinged the hero constantly and was more than a match for this con artist/thief. The banter kept me entertained and amused and the action kept me riveted.

Action. Adventure. Romance. Equals me, hooked. Completely. :-)

It’s Not Just a Job

Tuesday, July 5th, 2011

Truly, every day is an adventure inside my head. Something new always happens. Usually, it’s a new story or new characters talking. That’s totally normal to me and I take it in stride. I can even shrug off a return of old characters. They rarely come around, but it’s occurred. The other night, though, I entered uncharted territory.

It started out normal enough. Ravyn and Damon came in with Cam.

It isn’t the first time they’ve shown up and I was like, okay, hello. But after a little vignette with Cam, the strange part happened. I started to see what their romance/story would have looked like if there wasn’t a killer on Jarved Nine.

This was a first for me. It wasn’t as if I’d made a choice when I wrote the story about what the circumstances were that set it off and that I opted to have someone kill almost everyone on the planet. The story for Ravyn’s Flight came to me when I saw Ravyn huddled on the floor, her arms wrapped around her knees. I knew something awful had happened, but I didn’t know what and I began writing the story to find out.

I’m still trying to figure out why I suddenly got this scenario. I have to say, though, that although it was kind of a WTH moment, it was pretty cool. Writers are always asking what if? And while this wasn’t a question I’d thought of before, once it popped inside my head, it intrigued me.

No one will be surprised if I mention that they fell in love in this version, too, right?

The whole thing, while weird in the extreme, was fun, too. I got to revisit a couple of characters that I liked, saw a cool story, and I wasn’t required to do anything except be entertained. I’m calling this a win.

Bad To the Bone

Sunday, July 3rd, 2011

A recent Twitter discussion reminded me of another favorite book: Debra Dixon‘s Bad to the Bone. It came out from Loveswept in 1996 and is my favorite series romance story of all time. The thing that made it so awesome to me is the risks the author took.

To briefly summarize the story: The heroine is a retired assassin. She worked through an intermediary for the CIA and this man protected her when she wanted to quit. Now the man has disappeared and his daughter calls the heroine to ask for help. The girl also called the police. The hero used to work for the Houston Police Department, but he burned out and he’s now working in the small town where the missing man lives with his daughter. The hero is assigned to investigate. Do I need to mention that the h/h clash swords immediately? The heroine is all about protecting the man’s daughter, the hero has his sixth sense telling him that something more is going on than he’s being told.

There are so many things to love about this book. The first thing, before I even read it, was the heroine was an assassin. That’s not normal series romance trope, not even today, but especially not in 1996. The execution of this story is awesome! The dialogue sizzles, the sexual tension is just short of a boil from the instant the h/h meet, neither character is a pushover, and the action was there, too. Y’all know how much I love action with my romance.

The growth arcs of the h/h are spot on, too. These two wounded characters gradually open up to each other, learn about each other, and reach a place where the reader can believe the happy ending. I can’t even say enough how much I love this book.

Normally, I really don’t care about autographs. It’s just not my bag. But I stalked Deb Dixon at two Romance Writers of America conferences before I finally got her to sign my copy when she did a workshop for my local chapter. I’m not sure I entirely made sense as I gushed all over her, but this book is my favorite series romance book of all time and it ranks right up there with my favorite books of all time.

There might be a few places in the story where it was necessary to suspend my disbelief, but I honestly didn’t care and was willing to go there without hesitation. That’s how tremendous this book is.

I have a copy on my keeper/reread shelf–the highest honor possible. I also pick up it whenever I spot it at a used book store. I bet I have four or five copies now, but I want to be able to loan it out to friends and my autographed copy is not leaving my house. :-)

More Ebooks Please

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

For a variety of reasons, I’ve been looking for some of my favorite books in e-format. Specifically for Kindle since that’s the e-reader I use. To my great disappointment, the results have been less than stellar.

One of the books I wanted was available, but priced ridiculously high. I blogged about that last week, I think. The other titles I’m looking for don’t seem to be out as an ebook anywhere. I assumed that because these were older books and out of print that the authors had their rights back. I found out with one author that this wasn’t the case–she hadn’t been able to get her rights back from what I read online. I don’t know about the third one.

It’s not that I’m going to get rid of my paper copies of these books–I’m not–but I would like them in e-format, too. I guess I have an interesting perspective on things because I know so many authors who do have their rights back and who are getting them out there as ebooks. It honestly shocks me when I can’t find what I’m looking for on Amazon for my Kindle. Although, after the past week and all the books I can’t get, maybe I shouldn’t be so stunned anymore, huh?

I guess my plea is to all the authors who have their rights back and aren’t doing anything with them, please, get these books formatted for the different readers and available for sale. At a reasonable price. You don’t know who is out there, waiting to buy it. Like me.

And readers, I do have the rights back to my first four books and I am working to get them out there in e-format. It’s just taking longer than I’d hoped. My goal is before Christmas. I can do this. I hope.

Insurrection!

Tuesday, June 28th, 2011

My heroine and I spent the past weekend arguing. About a major plot element that sets up the entire romance.

Keep in mind that she originally voiced no opposition as I formed the general plot for this story. I thought that meant it was all good. As it turned out, it wasn’t.

I’ve mentioned before that my characters refuse to do what I want them to do if it’s something they don’t agree with. I sit and spin my wheels until I go back and change what they don’t like. This time, I didn’t even write the part of the scene yet that she was objecting to. This was a pre-objection. :-)

Actually, I’m okay with her objecting before I reach that part of the scene. It saves me from writing stuff I won’t be able to use and keeps me from coming to a complete stop as I try to figure out what’s wrong. It just would have been nice if she’d said something earlier.

I guess the fact that we spent an entire day arguing is my fault. I should have just agreed to change what she didn’t like. It wasn’t as if I had a choice, but this was a major structural piece of the story and I didn’t want to give it up.

As it turned out, though, it wasn’t too difficult to fix the issue. This surprised me. I expected to spend a lot of time struggling with this, but when I went to bed Saturday night, the answer popped into my head.

Sometimes there are epiphanies.

One of My Perfect 10s

Sunday, June 26th, 2011

I’m not a huge fan of historical romance. TBH, I find the future infinitely more fascinating than the past, which is probably why I enjoy Science Fiction Romance so much. I get the characterization, relationship and growth arcs, and happy ending that I love, but in the future or on another planet or on a space ship. Historicals…well, I used to buy them and then they’d sit in the To Be Read pile while I read all the futuristic and contemporary romances that I bought. The cycle was repeated month after month before I finally realized I wasn’t going to read those books no matter how interesting the plot sounded.

That said, I do have a some historical romances that I’ve loved. One of these is a sweet regency called A Suitable Match by Joy Freemen.

To briefly sum up the plot, the hero and heroine are the victims of a matchmaking plot that is very convoluted. It becomes further convoluted by misunderstandings that arise in the course of the book. These aren’t “why don’t they have a conversation” misunderstandings, but ones that arise because of what they were told by the matchmaker and perfectly logical in that context.

There were also some assumptions made by the hero because the heroine’s father and cousin were drunken reprobates. He believed she didn’t have the strict upbringing her station required because of this, but that wasn’t the case. The heroine, who loves a lark, finds it amusing to let him believe he’s right.

What I loved about this book was the humor. The lines flying between the characters, particularly the h/h made me LOL when I read the book. The heroine even zinged the hero a few times and that made it even better. The characterization was good, the growth arcs of the characters realistic, and while the culmination is the h/h kissing (no sex =8-O), I found myself waiting expectantly for that to happen.

There were a couple of stretches for plot that were a little difficult for me, but because it was a humorous story, I was willing to give the author more leeway than I would in a book that wasn’t funny. There’s also the prerequisite troublemaking young lady who wants the hero for herself and that’s something I’m not real fond of, but I was willing to overlook this, too, because of how much I liked the h/h and the humor.

How much did I like this book? The first time I read it, I’d checked it out of the library in hardcover. I immediately hunted down my own hardcover of the book and I don’t like hardcovers. :-) My shelves are all setup for mass market paperback size and the cost… Way more than I’d normally pay, but I had to have my own copy of this book.

On my spreadsheet, I rate books 1-10. I gave A Suitable Match a 10. IIRC, there are only ten books that I gave a perfect score.

Authors, Ebook Backlists, and the Sweet Spot

Thursday, June 23rd, 2011

On Twitter this weekend we were talking about books and the conversation had me mentioning a couple of mystery series written by a romance writer. There are romances in both of the series, but they’re a subplot, not the main plot. Thinking about these books made me wonder if they were in ebook format yet or not. I went over to take a look.

And there was the first book for my favorite of the two series. Yea! Except it was priced at $8.99. Huh?

This surprised me. The series was old enough that I thought it would cost a lot less, even with agency pricing. Especially since it ended after only four books. I would have liked the title on my Kindle, but I wasn’t paying that much when I had a paper copy on my shelves. (A paperback, BTW, that cost $5.99 and then I probably had a discount on it, too.) I thought the price was ridiculous. There wasn’t a disclaimer from Amazon saying that the price had been set by the publisher, so I scrolled down. The publisher listed was one I’d never heard of before and definitely not who put it out originally.

This got me curious. I Googled them and checked out the website that came up. It was a literary agent who started e-publishing authors’ backlists in 2001. I think that’s the date they listed on their site.

All I could think was wow.

First of all, they only give the author 50% until a certain sales threshold is met, then it goes to 60%. The 60% is okay if they’re providing other services besides just formatting the books and uploading them. I’m sorry, but it’s not that hard to format and the author could hire that out at a flat rate if she wasn’t tech savvy. (And to my dismay, many authors are most definitely not tech savvy.) The cover put on the book was lame enough that I could have done it myself, another huge strike. That’s my quality measure when it comes to graphics–if I can do it, it’s not good enough.

My second thought was this agency is grossly mismanaging the ebook publishing endeavor, and not only with the poor cover art. Okay, at least they’re mismanaging with this one book by this one author. I didn’t check out the other books they handle, but I’m assuming they’re doing the same thing with everyone else, too. The pricing is ridiculous.

I’m not a proponent of selling books in eformat for $2.99, not even backlist. I think that’s too low and devalues the incredibly hard work it takes to write a full-length novel, but at the same time, there’s no way I’m paying $8.99 either–not even for a new release. It made me wonder how many other people would have bought the ebook if the price had been less. If it had been $5.99 or lower, I know I would have picked up the book in electronic format because it’s just easier to have it accessible on my Kindle.

So from where I’m standing, the author got a bad cover and she’s getting only 50% royalties unless she passed whatever threshold amount was set, which I doubt because they’re pricing her out of sales. This doesn’t sound like a good deal to me or a smart way to handle backlist.

Two Reviews, One Blog Post

Sunday, June 19th, 2011

One of my favorite stories is an old Harlequin American romance by M.J. Rodgers. The Adventuress has a mild-mannered librarian heroine who moonlights as an action/adventure writer who has a recurring protagonist. She’s on a helicopter in Hawaii with the hero (who’s the pilot) when it crashes thanks to a hijacker. The knock in her head, has the heroine believing she’s the character in her book. As they try to survive in some very remote terrain, the heroine impresses the hell out of the hero.

You know, of course, that the action/adventure aspect grabbed me immediately, but I also liked the “become the book character” aspect as well. I have a fair amount of keeper books and I broke those down further to reread books. The Adventuress is a reread book for me. I love it!

It totally reminds me of the movie, American Dreamer starring JoBeth Williams and Tom Conti. I don’t own many DVDs, but this is one I had to have. In this story, the heroine wins a trip to France, goes alone, and she’s hit by a car. When she wakes up, she believes she’s the character in the Rebecca Ryan novels that are written by the Tom Conti character.

Her delusion gets the pair mixed up with some real bad guys and soon they’re in danger and trying to figure out what’s going on.

The movie and book are tied in my mind–I can’t think of one without the other popping into my head–and I love them both! I think it’s the idea of forgetting your own life and becoming someone else that intrigues me. In real life, putting aside the past and the baggage we’ve accumulated to change is almost impossible. Yes, we can change, but it’s a gradual thing that requires effort. In these two stories, the heroine gets a bump on the head and instantly becomes someone else. There’s some pretty cool character growth arcs, too.

My ratings:

The Adventuress – Keeper/Reread book
American Dreamer – 4 stars


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