Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Q & A with Entangled Author Michelle Smart by Lindsay J. Pryor


In the hot seat today, I’d like to welcome fabulous author Michelle Smart, recently signed by Entangled Publishing! For anyone in the know, Entangled Publishing has received some fantastic reviews and huge successes since launching last year. Line up in the envy queue as we expose Michelle’s very honest back-story and find out just how she got there.

Q) First of all, huge congratulations on being offered publication with Entangled Publishing! I know you can’t talk about Tempted By Trouble yet, but can you tell us more about what you write and why those sub-genres in particular?

Thank you Lindsay! I mostly write Contemporary Romance with the occasional dabble into more paranormal realms when I fancy a change. I suppose it’s like my tea drinking – I drink gallons of cups a day and then suddenly fancy a coffee.
I love the emotions that reading a good contemporary can dredge up – the tears, the laughter, the fears and the joy, all of which I hope to replicate for the reader in my own books.

Maybe paranormal is the wrong word to describe my other books which, so far, been for my own consumption. They’re just quirky takes on the ‘what if’ questions I am always asking myself.

Q) What’s been your personal journey to signing that contract?

Eek! The journey has been long and torturous! It has also been completely worth it.

I’ve written all my life – I once worked as a business journalist but please don’t hold that against me – but it was only around four or five years ago I decided to take writing for publication seriously. I love reading all genres but it’s romance I adore writing, so I decided to try my hand at writing a Mills & Boon. My first two manuscripts were a pile of doggy doo and were rightly rejected out of hand. By then the writing bug had well and truly bitten me on my bottom. My third book got to the RnR stage on the partial and was ultimately rejected.

My fourth was my first full request and is the book that went on to become Tempted By Trouble (TBT). Ultimately it was rejected after three rounds of revisions. By the time I hit send on the third set I had a bad feeling it was not going to fit. At this point I started getting my head around not limiting myself to one publisher. I had worked too hard and loved the book too much to just give up on it.

However, I was incredibly wary about going elsewhere – say what you like about Mills & Boon but they are an incredibly formidable publishing house and produce some fantastic books by fantastic authors. Many of my writing buddies were sending work to different publishing houses with varying degrees of success. For one reason or another, none of them appealed to me. And then I heard about Entangled and the staff it had on board and I researched them a bit further. I had already completed two more books between all the revisions so on a whim I entered one into a pitch contest. I failed. Weeks later I entered a second pitch contest: lo and behold, the full manuscript was requested! By the time TBT was rejected I already knew I wanted to send it to Entangled too.

Q) Although rejected by M&B, you found yourself in the enviable position of having two other publishers interested in Tempted By Trouble. Why did you choose Entangled?

The quality of the editors. The only reason I sent TBT to another publisher was because Entangled already had a full sub of mine and I knew it was bad form to send more than one sub at a time. This other publisher was a newbie too but it had backing from a major publishing house, which for me lowered the risk you associate with start-up publishers (you could say it would have been more of a risk to go with Entangled, but I can’t stress enough how the quality of the editors sold that publisher to me – if those fantastic editors believed enough in it then that was good enough for me).

I honestly thought it would take months before I heard back from the other publisher, which I thought would be ample time to hear from Entangled on the other sub. Except I received an offer-for-contract twenty four hours after hitting send…

I emailed Entangled and explained the situation. I was told to send it to Alethea, who got back to me a couple of days later saying it could, with a few changes, be perfect for Indulgence. I can be a bit ditsy at times – it took a full two weeks before I realised they actually wanted to contract it!

Incidentally, I’m still waiting to hear on the other sub *cough*.

Q) So Tempted By Trouble went through 3 rounds of revisions with Mills and Boon before the eventual thumb down. What did you learn during that process?

So much! Obviously a lot of it is specific to Mills & Boon, such as the need to keep secondary characters to a minimum and to ensure a rough 60/40 split between narrative and story. But I also learned about keeping characters and their reactions true to themselves, and not to throw a plot device in to drive the story onwards *coughs again*.

Q) You say you got back to the original story with Entangled. How did that come about?

During the first set of revisions my hero changed so much that, in a way, he no longer belonged to me and what I had originally created. This was as much down to my own inexperience in my original creation as to anything else – if I had nailed his character to begin with, the problems would never have occurred. Remember what I said about keeping characters and their reactions true…? By the time I’d completed the third set (and remember, I already knew in my gut it wasn’t working properly) the story had changed beyond all recognition and, much as the editor there wanted it to work, we had both reached the stage where we had, for want of a better way to explain it, become blind to it.

When Adrien-Luc was appointed as my editor at Entangled, he was able to look at it with fresh eyes. When he sent me the first batch of edits (a polite way of saying revisions in this case), the vast majority of his suggestions led to the story going back to what I had originally envisaged, but with characters that were now true to themselves. Incidentally, Adrien-Luc is fantastic to work with and I could not be happier than I am working with him.

Q) You also currently have a requested partial with Mills and Boon, which we’ll refer to as Nico and Rosa for now. Can you tell us more about what’s happening with that?
           
The wonderful editor there who has taken me under her wing (bless her heart for having so much faith in me), was very happy with the partial but felt it lacked a certain spark between the h/h, who are two very repressed people. The situation I have put them in is very emotional and she wants me to do it justice. She made one tiny suggestion and pow! That one suggestion has lit the spark and I’ve now sent her the first 30,000 words which I am sure I will hear her thoughts about in due course. I know I am in a very privileged position with her – she really has gone above and beyond the call of duty with me.

Q) Has working with an editor affected your writing?

Absolutely. There is so much out there at the moment about the wonders of self-publishing but it is not something I could ever contemplate without going through an editor first. I’m blessed in that I am working with two superb editors who want me to succeed. They see my strengths and want me to build on them. They see my weaknesses and want me to address and overcome them. As a writer you can become blind to any faults in your work and I’m not talking about typos. A good editor will catch any character inconsistencies and any glaring error and get you to fix it. They make suggestions for improvement and point out areas that are not working as well as they could be. I could never do this on my own.

Q) What do you find most challenging about the writing process?

Waiting! Touch wood, the actual writing comes easy for me; it’s all the associated parts I struggle with, especially as I’m about as patient as a child queuing to get into a sweetshop. I am also easily distracted so keeping off twitter is a challenge in itself! This is not a problem when I am working to a deadline but if I’m writing under my own steam…

Q) What’s the most rewarding aspect of writing for you?

Oh gawd… everything. I get to sit on my lazy backside all day and fall in love. I get to look at pictures of Johnny Depp and David Gandy for inspiration. One day I might even earn some money doing it!

Q) Can you tell us what’s coming next for you?

Hopefully I will hear about that other sub that’s sitting with Entangled soon, and I have another book I would like to offer them too. Then of course there’s Nico and Rosa I’m writing for Mills & Boon – ideally I would love a career writing for both publishing houses. Whatever happens, I will never stop writing.

Huge thanks for joining us today, Michelle!

Hopefully Michelle will come back in a couple of months to talk about the release of her book and what happened in-between. In the meantime, if you’d like to keep a close eye on her progress, you can find her here:

Twitter: @chellebellwrite

Monday, August 6, 2012

What Skeleton is Rattling in Your Closet? by Jennifer Faye

This post came to me as I was hit with a set of editor-suggested revisions for my latest story. I noticed a similarity between this set of revisions and the ones I previously completed for another story.

The biggest thing I noticed was that I had laid the ground work for my H/h’s backstories, I’d hinted at it, I’d teased about it, but I failed to swing open that closet door and let their skeletons and the ghosts that haunt them into the full sunlight.

It was all there in my head. I’d plotted and outlined. Their backstories were all neatly filed away, but I failed to put it on the page. <sigh>

I think perhaps I was hesitant because I’ll admit it. <raising hand> Hi, my name is Jennifer. And I’m a recovering contest junkie. There I publicly admit it. *G* Anyway while I was entering contest after contest, I heard a lot of “too much backstory.” I’m betting a lot of you have heard the same.

The thing is the comment was meant for the opening chapter, which is the average length of an entry in a writing contest. However, if you hear something long enough, I think it subconsciously sticks in your brain. For myself, I must have computed: backstory = bad.

Not true!

I’ve got to retrain my brain into believing that the pertinent part of a character’s backstory is my friend—in reasonable proportions. However, keep in mind that you don’t want to bog down the reader in the opening chapter. But you want to disperse the background information as it pertains to the character in their current situation.

Our backstories mold each one of us. Think about your past and how it affects the decisions you make today. For example: if you hated peas as a child but you were made to sit at the dinner table until your plate was picked clean, even if it meant sitting there for hours, you probably don’t eat peas even now as adult. Even though as you’ve grown and matured and most likely your tastes did too, I’d be willing to bet you still don’t like peas. The mere reminder of being miserable at the dinner table will keep you from giving those green little marbles a second chance. Sure, this is a simplistic example but you see what I’m saying. Your past is always with you and will in some way help influence your future.

However, a good friend of mine reminded me to mention that as well as the skeletons, you should not forget the importance of a character’s Ghost—the unhealed part of the backstory, which is going to directly influence your story. These are the things the H/h long to keep hidden and will do everything in their power to hide, but you must unearth them if the reader is to understand and sympathize with them and their choices.

For example, Casablanca’s ghost is Rick’s affair with Ilse. NOT his backstory of being a gun runner.

Not all backstory is equal!

It’s the stuff that will make a difference that you want on the page.

So don’t be afraid of those ghosts in the closet—at least not the ones belonging to your H/h. *G* Embrace them. Swing open that closet door and air out those ghosts. They are your friends. They will help make your H/h into well-rounded characters. They will provide motivation for the H/h actions. And they will provide you with a beginning for your character arc.

BTW, this is my very first blog entry. Hope you enjoyed it.

Friday, August 3, 2012

Q&A with Bestselling Author Nicola Marsh By: Victoria James

A very big welcome from all of us at The Hot Pink Typewriter to USA TODAY Bestselling author, Nicola Marsh!


USA TODAY bestselling author Nicola Marsh writes flirty fiction with flair.
She’s had 32 books published with Harlequin Romance and Presents series, a fun, flirty contemporary mainstream romance BUSTED IN BOLLYWOOD with Entangled Publishing (nominated for Romantic Book of the Year 2012) and sold over 3 million copies worldwide.
Her first category romance for Entangled Publishing’s Indulgence series, NOT THE MARRYING KIND, releases July 2012, with another category contemporary romance FALLING FOR FLYNN releasing with Crimson Romance October 2012.
Her urban fantasy young adult novel SCION OF THE SUN releases November 2013 with Month9Books.
She’s also a Waldenbooks and Bookscan bestseller, has finaled in a number of awards, including the Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice Award, HOLT, Booksellers’ Best, Golden Quill, Laurel Wreath,
More than Magic and has won several CataRomance Reviewers’ Choice Awards.
A physiotherapist for thirteen years, she now adores writing full time, raising her two little heroes, sharing fine food with family and friends, and her favorite, curling up with a good book!

Now, I can't start this interview without first listing the jaw-dropping list of publishers/books Nicola has been writing for...Nicola currently has a mainstream contemporary romance out with Entangled Publishing (BUSTED IN BOLLYWOOD) and NOT THE MARRYING KIND her first category romance for Entangled Publishing’s Indulgence series just released. She also writes for Harlequin Romance & Harlequin Presents (has published 32 books with them), has another category romance releasing with Crimson Romance in October and her Young Adult urban fantasy series launching with SCION OF THE SUN released Nov 2013 with Month9Books.

 

She's also a mother to two young children and a wife...Nicola, please tell me you drink lots of coffee?


Nicola: Don’t hate me but I’m not a regular coffee drinker! I started writing just before my first child was born and was working full time as a physiotherapist, so my writing time was confined to night. With limited writing time, I got used to writing fast, and thankfully that habit has stuck with me. While raising my kids I’ve stuck to the nightly writing routine and it has served me well. Caffeine-free!


Q: Whenever I see your tweets or read your blog, I'm so inspired by your drive and energy. Seriously, if I did half of what you did, I'm sure I wouldn't ever have time to sleep. Ever. Do you have a daily routine that you follow? What is a typical work day like for you?


Nicola: Sadly, I don’t have enough sleep as I would like! I get 6 hours a night when I could do with 8 minimum (I had kids who didn’t sleep through the night until they were older so I need to catch up on a few years’ worth!) This is the first year my youngest is at full time kinder so my routine has changed. From 9-11am I check emails, update blogs and do general social media stuff. 11am-1pm is when I squeeze in writing or revisions. Then my best writing time kicks in between 8.30-10.30pm. I squeeze this in around the rest of my life so I pretty much fall into bed around midnight!

Q: How do you balance writing, social media/promotion, and family?


Nicola: Family always comes first. Always. That said, I’ll be honest and say I’m guilty of plonking the kids in front of TV during school holidays at times to finish urgent galleys or a deadline book!
With the social media, I love Twitter and my can be found tapping away at my phone day and night!

Q: BUSTED IN BOLLYWOOD has been a huge success, congratulations. What was the most challenging part in switching gears from category to single title?


Nicola: While I love the challenge of writing category romance, I found the switch to longer mainstream books quite liberating. Being able to expand on secondary characters and plotlines was fun!

Q: Self-promotion is so important now for authors, especially those just starting out. Do you have any advice or tips on what you think is essential for a published author?


Nicola: Be professional at all times. In whatever medium (Twitter, FB, Goodreads, blog, etc…) remember that once you say something it’s out there forever. So however much you hate that shoddy review, curb the impulse to vent. And don’t engage with unhappy readers. Be gracious. Class always shows.

Q: Can you tell us what you're busy working on now and what/when your next release will be?


Nicola: I’ve just started writing book 33 for Harlequin, featuring a WAG and a publishing CEO. Promises to be huge fun!


NOT THE MARRYING KIND ($2.99 e-book) released this week with Entangled Publishing and I’m super excited (I love this book!)


Next up is MARRYING THE ENEMY (Harlequin Presents Extra), releasing in September, closely followed by WEDDING DATE WITH MR. WRONG (Harlequin Romance) and FALLING FOR FLYNN (Crimson Romance) in October.


Thank you so much for taking time out of your busy schedule to visit with us, Nicola and best of luck on all your future books!


Nicola: Thanks again for having me.  I’ve had fun!


Who said marriage had to be convenient?
LA party planner Poppy Collins has kept her side business—planning divorce parties as the Divorce Diva—under wraps, but keeping her sister's company afloat is proving tougher by the day. When a new divorce party prospect gives Poppy the opportunity to save the day and boost her bottom line, she can't pass it up. But this time, she's about to get way more than she bargained for…

Vegas golden boy Beck Blackwood knows Poppy's secret, and he's not afraid to use it to get exactly what he wants—a wife. With his reputation and corporate expansion plans on the line, the only way he can repair the damage is by getting hitched, and fast. And if blackmail is the only way to get Poppy to the altar, then so be it…
But they're in the city of high stakes, and Poppy has a few aces up her sleeve. Now it's time to find out if they're playing to win…or if they're playing for keeps.
You can read an excerpt of Not The Marrying Kind here
Not The Marrying Kind is available for purchase through Amazon and Barnes & Noble
Nicola loves interacting with readers so you can find her at:
Goodreads: www.goodreads.com/Nicola_Marsh






Thursday, August 2, 2012

And we have a Winner!!!


Thanks to a random number generator, we have a winner for Michelle Style's 'His Unsuitable Viscountess.'

Drum roll please....

Amy, you are the winner.

Huge congratulations!!!

If you could email me with your full name and snail mail address, we'll get your prize sent out to you.

Thank you everyone for stopping by and commenting. We loved having you. Stop back soon. We have some great blog posts coming up!!!

 

 

Wednesday, August 1, 2012

Historical Author Michelle Styles is in the Hot Seat!

And we have a Book Giveaway!!!

Michelle, welcome to the Hot Pink Typewriter! We’re thrilled to have you. Congratulations on your latest Harlequin Historical “His Unsuitable Viscountess” is available this month.

And thank you for graciously offering a copy of “His Unsuitable Viscountess” to one lucky commenter. Don’t you just love prizes? I know I do. And what could be better than a new release? *G*

My thinking entirely!!!

Would you mind sharing a little about your book? What was your inspiration? How did you familiarize yourself with the locale and time period?

His Unsuitable Viscountess is about a Regency business woman who is forced to make a marriage of convenience in order to save  the family firm because of her step father’s will. My inspiration was the real life regency business woman Eleanor Coade who ran Coade stone as I had read about her in a book about women and gardening.

When I started to do my research, I was surprised to learn that one of the Lady Patronesses of Almack was also the senior partner of a successful bank. Lady Jersey inherited Childs Bank from her grandfather because he did not approve of her mother eloping with the Earl of Westmorland. There were successful Regency business women, if you know where to look.

It is said that Jane Austen modeled Fanny Price’s odious aunt on Sara Rice who among other things ran the carrier pigeon service that first brought news of Waterloo. Jane had been displeased when Sara refused to give Sara’s eldest a certain vicarage. Sara wanted something else for her son. Jane took her revenge in the way only an author can!

I love doing research so I read a lot. I also visit old houses, make various recipes, try to figure out how people could move in the clothes they wore.  For His Unsuitable Viscountess, I also did research on sword-making and how an early 19th century foundry would have operated. Luckily I was able to visit a replica in Sheffield.  I also visited the local Living History museum Beamish as it is good to listen to the sounds and experience the smells.

With all of the research involved in writing historical romances, it must keep you busy. Can you share with us how you balance your writing with the rest of your life? Do you have a regular schedule? Any quirks?

Balance is always key. I write every day except Christmas. When I am seriously chasing a deadline, I start at 9:30 am and write until I have 2 -3 k written.  I find I have to turn the internet off or I keep making excuses to check various bits of info etc.

I wake up early about 5:30 am to get my exercise in. I do an hour and half of Tracy Anderson. Then breakfast and do my admin. In theory this leaves me free to see my family in the late afternoon/early evening.

For you, what is the most challenging part of writing a book? Beginnings? Middles? Ends? How do you conquer these problem areas?

Every book is different for me. Just when I think I have a problem area conquered, a new one rears its head. It is very hard to predict. Every book and set of characters has their own unique set of tortures for the writer. I wish I could say that they get easier to write. They don’t. They are just all different but that is part of the fun of it. If I didn’t find it challenging, I wouldn’t enjoy it half as much.

Not only do you write on a regular basis but you’re also an editor of The Pink Heart Society, run your own blog, and provide excellent advice on the Harlequin SubCare forum. How important do you feel social media is to an author’s career? Any tips on balancing social media with your writing?

I do social media because I enjoy it. I do think it is a way of letting people know about books etc. The most important thing for a writer’s career is to write a book that engages the reader and keeps them turning the page because they are emotionally involved with the characters.

It is important to limit your time on the internet. When I am seriously behind, I have to switch the internet off. I tend to use the internet in the same way that Georgette Heyer used to use playing solitaire. It allows my subconscious to work out knotty problems.

I would also say, try to think of other subject/hobbies you are interested in and get involved with the social media side with that hobby. You don’t want to be just interacting with authors and members of Romancelandia. There is a whole wide world out there of literate people who enjoy reading books, particularly of authors with whom they have had some interaction. So think about what you like and don’t be afraid to speak up on certain sites.  It is all a very soft sell so you should only do it if you enjoy the experience, rather than thinking of it as promotion.

You should also remember that you are not talking with your friends. Keep things you want private in emails, rather than sharing out them out loud in public when you never know who will be listening.

The big thing authors hear these days is self-promotion, especially for newbies. Could you give us tips on the essential must-do’s for an author?

The best thing to do is to figure out how to get your books into the hands of readers. You want to find the readers who are going to engage with your characters. Not everyone will, but you are not writing for everyone, you are writing for the people who enjoy your books.  I always do a Goodreads giveaway for my new releases as their members are readers.

You should always remember that PR and self promo does take a long time and you can never be sure what actually is going to work or why a book is popular. It is very tempting to think if only or some author is doing brilliantly with x,y,z. You need to do what is right for you.

The best promo is to write the next book. The last page of your latest sells the first page of your next book so you want to have your books coming out at regular intervals. And you never want to sacrifice quality for speed because it is the reading experience the reader wants. You don’t want to become the author a reader used to love, you want to be the author that the reader can’t wait for her next book for.

You also need to remember that in order to promote, you always need to have something in the shop window.

If there was one thing you wished you’d have known before you got published, what would it be?

It never gets any easier to write a book. The craft of writing can never fully be mastered but it is worthy trying. Craft provides the engine which allows the jet fuel of talent to burn with purpose.

It is truly dedication, desire, discipline, determination and perseverance. Nora Roberts took 16 years of being published before she hit number 1.

And with publishing, everything always seems to take longer than you expect. Publishing operates on its own time.

What’s the title of your next book to hit the shelves? When can we expect it?

The next one hits the shelves in November Hattie Wilkinson Meets Her Match.

The blurb reads:

WHEN OPPOSITES ATTRACT…!

In the eyes of the ton Hattie Wilkinson is a respectable widow, content with her safe, if somewhat modest life.

On the other hand Sir Christopher Foxton prides himself on being regarded as one of London’s most notorious rakes, with a particularly mischievous streak!

Upon their first meeting Kit threatens to shatter Hattie’s well-ordered peace—and her reputation!—if only she’ll allow herself to succumb to his playful advances. This time they’ve both finally met their match…

Set in July 1816 Tyne Valley


And after that, the next one is published in April 2013 and features Sophie Ravel from To Marry A Matchmaker (the woman who took a frying pan on an elopement and was not afraid to use it)

Thank you so much for stopping by The Hot Pink Typewriter!!! We loved having you and hope you’ll stop by again.

And readers, don’t forget to leave a comment and be entered in the book giveaway. One very lucky commenter will receive a copy of “His Unsuitable Viscountess.”

You can find Michelle at:

http://www.michellestyles.blogspot.com/
http://pinkheartsociety.blogspot.com/

From hard-headed businesswoman…

A lifetime of living in a man’s world has given sword-making factory owner Eleanor Blackwell some very definite opinions – particularly about the duplicity of men!

…to blushing bride?

Benjamin Grayson, Viscount Whittonstall, seems to be cut from a different cloth—Eleanor responds to his touch with a passion normally only reserved for fencing! She may be spectacularly unsuited for aristocracy, but Ben has different ideas when he plans to safeguard her business with a very convenient proposal...


Set in County Durham during the Regency period

You can read an excerpt of His Unsuitable Viscountess here