Author: Maria Messini

  • Calling All Critiques: The Rules

    Super energetic author and blogger, Samantha Saboviec is this event’s co-ordinator, and she’s prepared a detailed post with everything you’ll need to know in order to participate. And all that in spite of having to focus on the release day (today) of her debut fantasy, Guarding Angel (Fallen Redemption #1). Awesome! Over to you, Sam!
    _____________________________________

    We have less than one week before Calling All Critiques starts accepting its inaugural entries! Today I’ll introduce the rules. You can read more about the event and participating bloggers here: Calling All Critiques: A Cross-Blog Event and Introducing Your Hosts.

    What to Enter

    The schedule for the weekly critiques is as follows:

    • Week of May 26: First 500 word critique
    • Week of June 2: Cover art critique
    • Week of June 9:  Book blurb or query letter critique

    For this coming week, you may submit your first 500 words, finishing at the end of the sentence. (That is, your entry could be 505 words long … or 510 words … or 515 words … but let’s not get too crazy with our run-on sentences, mmkay?)

    How to Enter

    Starting Saturday, May 24, 2014 at 6 a.m., submit your entry to Critiques@Saboviec.com. Cut and paste the following template into your email and fill it in.

    Your name/pseudonym:
    Your website (optional):
    Title:

    Genre (include audience, such as YA/Adult, and category):
    Entry:

    Your email will be kept confidential. What you submit is what will be posted, so double- and triple-check your spelling and grammar. (We may correct crazy formatting errors as a result of email quirks, but still, make sure it’s clean before you press send.) You may resubmit an entry, but it goes to the end of the queue: if you submit it past the 35 entry cutoff, you’ll have lost your spot.

    Your entry will be assigned a number in the order in which it was received. Our cutoff is 35 entries or until 5 p.m. on Sunday, May 25, 2014. Entries 1-7 will be posted on our blogs Monday morning, entries 8-14 will be posted on our blogs Tuesday morning, etc.

    All 35 accepted entrants will be entered into the prize draw, and the winner will be chosen by their assigned number through Random.org.

    And I will say this one more time: If you don’t want both positive and negative feedback, please don’t enter. This event is for us to help one another grow as authors and maybe to make some friends in the process.

    Some fine print: Entries that don’t include the above information will be discarded. At our sole discretion, we may also discard other posts for reasons such as offensive/distasteful material. Erotica may be confined only to certain blogs, and we may put an adult content warning on it.

    If You Enter, Please …

    Critique other entrants. The sky’s the limit on how many other entries you critique, but we ask that you at least provide feedback to four other participants.

    Also, when you receive feedback on your entry, be gracious if you decide to respond. I would highly suggest not responding except for perhaps a “thank you,” but you’re going to do what you’re going to do, aren’t you? Don’t be defensive or explanatory; these critiques are for you to improve your writing. Take what you want and leave the rest behind.

    And If You Critique, Please …

    Be nice. Be constructive. Be specific. Be polite.

    Mean-spirited or spam posts will be deleted. General “I love everything about it and I think you’re the next J.K. Rowling, ZOMG!” obviously-written-about-your-best-friend comments won’t be deleted, but that’s tacky. Don’t be tacky.

    Less than one week until we begin accepting critiques!

    While you wait, check out all the participating blogs and bloggers:

    We look forward to seeing you back here soon.

    Any questions? Leave them in the comments!

  • Cover Reveal: Struggles of the Women Folk by T.M. Brown

    Another amazing book about empowerment is on tour right now, and I can’t wait until I read and review “Struggles of the Women Folk“.

    Struggles New E-Book Cover

     

    Genres:

    African American fiction,

    historical fiction,

    women’s issues.

    Themes:

    family dynamics,

    romance,

    perseverance (sp)

    Book Blurb

    “Struggles of the Women Folk” is based on fictional characters created from stories my grandma shared with me when I was child. It is the story of Georgie, a young Black girl in the South during the 1940s. I hope that you can appreciate her pain, suffering and betrayal as you travel with her on highs and lows you won’t anticipate. This is the story of the power of a woman’s courage, love, strength and faith that exists within each and every one us, whether we know it or not..

     Excerpt:

    Sissy knew she wasn’t pretty, cuz erbody told her so! She had all dem black features that erbody thought was ugly: dark skin, short nappy hair, big eyes, big lips, huge breast and a big butt. None of that mattered to me, cuz she was not just my cousin; she was my best friend.

    Her momma and mine couldn’t stand each other, but we didn’t care.

    We’d been friends for as long as I could remember. Every day, we walked the five miles to the little shack we called skool, carrying our books and lunch pails. Momma would always have something special in my pail. There would be bread, cheese, jelly and sometimes even a slice of homemade cake. Sissy never had anything good. Most times, she only had a piece of bread or some leftover salt pork.

    “Ain’t got no money to be spending on some ugly thang like you,” her momma would say. Her momma hated her. Folks say it was because she didn’t know who Sissy’s daddy was. Her momma was walking home one night when some men jumped her in the woods and made her ‘with child’. That’s what the folks called it in 1944. No one used words like pregnant, at least, not the good girls.

     

    ×Proofread (8)

    Get it now on:

    AMAZON

    SMASHWORDS

    BARNES AND NOBLE

    Connect with the author:

    Website: http://www.authortmbrown.com/

    Twitter: https://twitter.com/TbrownM
    Facebook: Facebook profile

    LinkedIn: http://www.linkedin.com/inbox/messages/received?trk=nav_utilities_inbox
    Blog: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/4197635.T_M_Brown/blog

     

    FRBT Badge Template 800

    Fabulosity Reads Book Promotions is a book touring website that promotes authors and their precious works to an extensive audience using blogs, twitter, Facebook and other Social Media, with the aim of introducing them to an appreciative readership.

    They offer a diverse range of both complimentary and affordable products to help the reach of your book go that much further.

     

     

     

  • Book Blast: A Community of Butterflies: Chrysalis

    I caught on to this late, but it’s a worthy cause, and I’m not wasting the opportunity to introduce this amazing book to you.

    A Community of Butterflies: Chrysalis
    by Barbara Shoff

    Proceeds from this book go to a shelter for survivors of Domestic Violence and Abuse, which the author is also a survivor of. 

    Back blurb

    A Community of Butterflies: Chrysalis (Published by LilyBearHouse, LLC.)

    On-again-off-again psychic Vay Armstrong has a plan to change the world. Following ten years of domestic violence and abuse, she struggles with post-traumatic stress, paranoia and an inability to trust others. Determined to escape her reclusive life, she enlists the help of other abuse survivors to create a utopian community within Jakesville, Oklahoma. Will Vay be able to overcome family opposition, a romantic entanglement and a homicidal stalker to make her vision a reality, or will her only reality be a cold hole in the ground?”

    Excerpt

    Her eyes flashed opened meeting darkness. She heard loud barking near her head, followed by the cracking retort of gunshots outside her window. Her desire to survive overpowered her exhaustion.

    He was back.

    Reaching across pillows she wrapped her two terriers in one arm. She rolled to the floor, her free hand grasping the .38 from her nightstand. Crouching, she scurried across the hall to her closet sanctuary. She shoved both pets into a single crate.

    “Shhh,” she commanded. They obeyed.

    Bracing herself against the wall, flipping the safety with her thumb, she waited.

    Calls for help were useless. William was never there when law enforcement arrived. She’d remembered the officers’ whispers, “Paranoid. Delusional. Crazy.”

    She made the decision.

    Escape.

    ‘ … just when the caterpillar thought the world was over,

    it became a butterfly … ”

    About the Author

    backpageinsert

    Barbara Shoff began writing before she could write. At the age of five she would make up dialogue for her friends so they could perform plays. They charged a nickle a performance to “the old people” (parents and grandparents) in the neighborhood. The stage was a front porch with a blanket curtain.

    Their group was quite successful which kept them in bubble gum and popsicles most summers.

    In the 1980’s Barbara had a column in a small town Missouri newspaper. It was called, “BJ’s Corner.” She wrote it for free. She became serious about writing and began penning articles for several women’s magazines.

    “I sold my first article for $25. I was so excited I screamed so loud you would have thought it was for 25 million. I have written brilliant ad copy as well as very dull assembly instruction manuals.”

    Severely social media challenged two years ago, Barbara became the accidental Pundit on PolicyMic.

    It was when she had her non-fiction expose’ complete and was looking for a publisher when Barbara decided it was high-time the old dog started learning new tricks.

    As a survivor of domestic violence and abuse she wanted to give back to her community. “Social workers educating survivors living in a shelter about domestic violence and abuse is ass backwards. These women already know better than the social workers what happened. The ‘whys’ research is still sorting out. What survivors need to learn is how protect themselves and support themselves while they heal and transform into something stronger and more beautiful than they were before. To that purpose, I wrote a stalker thriller, A Community of Butterflies: Chrysalis as the first book in a trilogy.”

    Barbara has picked every brain she could find to try to figure out about the ins and outs of developing a “platform” and how social media works for writers. She took a social media for dummies class at a local technology center. “I almost learned some things about Facebook. The next day they changed it.

    “I hired a fifteen year old to teach me asking, how something was done. He would shrug his shoulders and say, ‘Dunno. Let’s try this. Nope, not that, Let’s try this.’ Fifty dollars later a light went on and I decided to try stuff on my own. I watched YouTube videos until my eyes crossed, took a spiral notebook full of notes and finally built a website.

    “I am still learning. Now both books are published. I am signed up on almost every freaking social media site there is and am maybe, kinda, sorta getting an idea of how they possibly work. Mostly I’m praying Oprah or Ellen will ‘discover’ me and I can concentrate on writing my books and going to shelters giving chrysalis building lessons.

    “Oh, yeah. In 2013 I was honored to be a member of the inaugural cast of Oklahoma City’s production of Listen to Your Mother. You can watch me on YouTube by searching, LTYM OKC Barbara Shoff.”

    Contact the Author

    Website

    Facebook

    Blog:

    Amazon:

     

     

     

  • Nat Russo – WIP interview

    Before I introduce Nat Russo to you, I’d like to point out that Nat was the very first writer I followed back in November when I started my author platform, and the first one to answer my newbie questions. Although he was not published then, I was humbled by how accessible he was even though he already had over 30,000 Twitter followers (almost doubled now).

    Six months later…

    Nat Russo is the bestselling author of “Necromancer Awakening”, the first installment of a series titled “The Mukhtaar Chronicles”. Since its release on April 9, 2014, “Necromancer Awakening” has shot up the bestseller lists, making its way to the top 5 on Amazon’s Dark Fantasy Bestseller list, top 5 on Amazon’s Sword and Sorcery Bestseller list, top 5 on Amazon’s Metaphysical Fantasy Bestseller list, and top 50 on Amazon’s Horror Bestseller list. 

    Nat mentors up-and-coming writers around the world through his popular Twitter feed, as well as a blog dedicated to learning and improving the craft of writing.

    Nat, thank you for coming and congratulations on your Necromancer’s success! Tell us more about your life outside writing.

    I’m a software engineer by day and a fantasy writer by night. I was born in New York City, raised in Arizona, and I’ve lived just about everywhere in between. Though I’m now married with a family of my own, I once studied to be a Catholic priest in a Benedictine monastery for several years. This gave me a deep, abiding love of Philosophy and Theology, both of which are expressed in various ways in my work. My Bachelor’s degree, in fact, is in Philosophy.

    My seminary days were not all bright. Before I had the great privilege of studying under the Benedictine monks, I had the misfortune of experiencing life in a religious order called The Legionaries of Christ. I witnessed extreme abuses of religious authority during my time with them, and this too is expressed in my work. I tend to write about the consequences and implications of allowing either Faith or Reason to overshadow the other, and the problems inherent in considering any person “Holy”.

    Can you give us an idea on your current WIP?

    I’m currently working on the sequel to “Necromancer Awakening”, titled “Necromancer Falling”. I’m in the story-boarding stage of this project, and I’m very happy with the direction it’s going. I’ll be introducing two new key characters that I’m extremely excited about. Readers of “Necromancer Awakening” will tell you the Three Kingdoms aren’t out of danger yet, and “Necromancer Falling” makes that painfully clear. This isn’t the “happy ending” fantasy tale that many people are accustomed to, as I’m sure you inferred from the title.

    In addition to “Necromancer Falling”, I’m currently in the first-draft phase of “The Road to Dar Rodon”, which is a short story set in the “Necromancer Awakening” universe. You don’t have to read “Necromancer Awakening” to appreciate this story, however. But, if you have read the book, you’ll probably find some “Easter eggs” in the short story that will amuse you.

    That will be a treat for your fans! Are you happy with the pace of your work? Do you aim at a specific word count each day?

    I’ve learned not to beat myself up too much. There are days when the work flows from my fingertips, and days when I sit staring at the screen. I believe both types of days are valuable. It often takes the subconscious a while to percolate over a problem. If I force it, then I usually end up with sub-par work that I have to rewrite anyway. When I have those days, I step away from the keyboard and take my mind off it. I’ve found that when I return to the keyboard after a break, the words flow once more.

    I’ve tried setting word count goals for myself on a daily basis, but I quickly abandoned that. It works for many writers, but any number I came up with just seemed rather arbitrary to me. So rather than specify a specific count, I just follow the spirit in which word count goals were created: try to write every day.

    Plotter, pantser or both?

    Definitely both. I begin every novel-length work with a detailed outline that includes scene descriptions. These scene descriptions, however, are little more than a scene goal, an outcome, and the POV in which the scene will be written. I create a story framework (usually some variation on Three Act Structure/7-point Story Structure) and stick to that pretty rigorously.

    However, when it comes time to write the actual prose, I go into “discovery writing” mode. I have little more than the scene description, and maybe one or two key events/quotes per scene that I know I want to include. I use my story framework to help me steer the improvisational writing that takes place when I’m actually writing the story.

    What’s your worst enemy in getting that first draft finished?

    I spend too much time questioning myself and trying to “get it right”. One lesson I’ve learned: I’ll never be 100% satisfied with my work, so I don’t strive for perfection anymore. Instead, I strive to be the best I can right now. I’ll always improve, but I haven’t yet learned the lessons that will elevate my craft to that hypothetical future state, so I had to learn to stop beating myself up and just finish the draft.

    The first one million words are the hardest, they say… Have you experienced “writer’s block” and how do you overcome it?

    I have, and I found several different ways to approach the problem. When I’m struggling over where to go next in a story, I’ve found the best way to solve an immediate problem is to inject tension and conflict. One way I do this is through the “Yes, but… / No, and…” principle. Every scene has a goal, and every scene goal has an outcome. For the vast majority of a story, the protagonist shouldn’t be succeeding. Or, if they succeed, it should come at a price. When I write a scene goal on my virtual scene “cards”, I follow it with this question: “Success?” The answer to that question is always either “Yes, but…” or “No, and…” In other words, “Yes, but the price of success is…” or “No, and the situation is even worse than they thought.” As long as I set the main character back, I’m on the right track. Until the end, of course.

    In some cases, I learned that writer’s block can occur when my subconscious mind is still working on a problem. When that happens, the best thing I can do is get out of its way and let it do its job. Sometimes this means taking a short break (a day or more). After these short breaks, the block is usually gone.

    Could we take a look at your workspace? Is there a particular place you find inspiring?

    The answer to the question “What do I find inspiring about this space?” has two answers. First, I’ll give you the literary answer. My characters are nearly always in a position where success or failure is based on how well they can grasp and hold onto the things that matter most in life. My writing space is the main living room in my house. This is where my family “hangs out”. There’s always activity, whether someone is cooking in the adjacent kitchen, or watching television. Family life is what matters most to me, and I find it inspiring.

    Now the pragmatic answer: My office has been taken over by my 13-year old son, and between his computer and musical instruments, there’s no space left for me! Also, Toby [seen in the picture] has very strict requirements for a work space. He needs his papasan chair or he gets writer’s block.

    Toby is the second canine featured in a workspace! He’ll now keep company to Wallace, Marjory McGinn’s partner in writing, in my Featured Writers’ Workspace Board. Apart from Word and Google, do you use any other writing or research tools and apps?

    I avoid Word like the plague. I had used it for many years until another writer introduced me to Scrivener. I’ve used Scrivener for about a year and a half now, and I’m a devout convert. It’s written by writers, for writers. And best of all, it stays out of your way. When I used Word, it seemed as if every day was a battle with my own tools. Making the switch was a freeing experience.

    Aside from Scrivener, I use Scapple (by the makers of Scrivener) to quickly jot notes and make connections between ideas. I’ve only started using this, though, so the jury is out on whether I’ll continue. So far so good, though.

    I use Campaign Cartographer 3 to produce high quality maps. As a Fantasy author, maps are essential.

    I also use a web service called IFTTT (“If This Then That”). This service allows me to send a quick email to myself, and, based on a rule set that I specify, it will append story ideas to a Google Drive document. This way, if an idea strikes me when I’m nowhere near a notepad or computer, I can send a quick email to myself with my phone and know that my idea will be recorded in a central location on Google Drive.

    Lots of solutions for writers there! Thanks for sharing! How do you intend to celebrate writing “The End” on your draft?

    I usually celebrate by immediately plunging in to plotting future work. If I do non-creative things, I find my mind drifting back to the work I just finished, which doesn’t allow me to get the sort of distance from the work that I need in order to go back for the first read-through. By starting follow-up work, however, I’m exercising the same creative muscles, so they don’t have time to grapple with the work I just set aside.

    Which book publishing processes are you going to outsource and which are you confident enough to undertake yourself?

    I’ve outsourced cover design, and I highly recommend this to other authors. Unless you’re a professional designer, you’re just not going to produce professional-quality covers. I’ve seen too many writers get this wrong to not call in a professional for my own cover.

    Had I not been working with various beta readers for more than 2 years on this project, I would have also outsourced the editing. I didn’t do that this time around, but I have a high level of confidence because of how much revision it has been through, as well as my own personal skill sets (I had a professional editor tell me that in 20 years of publishing it was the cleanest manuscript he’d ever seen come across his desk). Time will tell, I suppose. I may outsource the next just to get a handle on what the experience is like and whether it is necessary. But I’ve seen many “professionally edited” self-published books with horrible editing. The sad thing is I know how much they paid to have it done.

    Do you have any marketing tips or favorite promotional sites you’d like to share?

    There’s one truism in publishing: no one knows how to sell books. Sounds funny, but it’s true. The only thing we know for certain is that word-of-mouth sells a book far better than any marketing campaign.

    That being said, self-publishers need to be in it for the long haul. It takes time for a story to find its audience, and there is no magic web site you can use or amount of money you can spend that will change this. I occasionally post marketing materials on Twitter and Facebook, but I don’t believe this is going to have a large impact on book sales (and I recommend keeping these to a bare minimum!).

    My advice to self-publishers is this: be a contributor. Be a content provider, first and foremost, and people will seek out your fiction. As my blog (which focuses on the craft of writing) began to take off, people started asking me where they could find my books. Give people something of value and they will want more of you.

    That’s the advice I keep reading from many, but it looks like only a few heed it. Is fantasy the genre you will brand yourself with or do you see yourself branching out in the future?

    Fantasy is a great comfort zone of mine. I’ve always gravitated toward it in both reading and writing. In fact, Fantasy is the primary reason I became an avid reader to begin with. However, Fantasy and Science Fiction are cut from the same cloth. Both accomplish the same thing: each conveys a set of truths about the world. Fantasy conveys these truths through a world that will never be possible. Science Fiction conveys these truths through a world that simply isn’t possible yet. I consider myself a Speculative Fiction author, and I can see myself writing Science Fiction in the future as well as Fantasy.

    Would you like to share with us links where we can find you and your work?

    My bestselling novel, Necromancer Awakening, was published on April 09, 2014, in digital and print editions through Amazon and CreateSpace. If you’re interested, you can read some of it and/or buy a copy here: http://www.amazon.com/dp/B00JLVOU0U/

    Some other places you can find me…

    Blog: http://www.nat-russo.com

    Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/NatRusso

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/NatRussoAuthor

    Google+: http://bit.ly/1gceCpf

    Pinterest: http://www.pinterest.com/NatRussoAuthor/

    Thank you, Nat, and best of luck with your Necromancer Falling and The Road to Dar Rodon!

     

     

  • May Book Festival by Fabulosity Reads

    BRD-Books

    MAY Book Festival Catalogue for the Book Review Depot | Fabulosity Reads

    Before you check out the awesome multi-genre titles brought to you by Fabulosity Books Book Tours, let me present our task as hosts of the tour: choose a book from the CATALOGUE, cast a character and explain our casting choice. The book I chose is The Funeral Singer by Linda Budzinski, and my casting choice for Melanie Martin is …

    Kristen2

    Kristen Stewart!

    Well, those who know me will hardly be surprised! As if I wasn’t dying for an excuse to put Kristen on this blog! I confess to being a die-hard Kristen Stewart fan (momentary indiscretions notwithstanding), but even if that was not true, she’d still be the ideal Melanie! Check this out: she’s the teenage daughter of a mortician, who loves her rock music, has a stellar voice, and her Amazing Grace rendition at the funeral of her favorite band’s keyboard player goes viral on YouTube! She’s far from perfect as a person but tries to be honest with herself, makes a lot of mistakes and learns through them. Now tell me that Kristen in Runaways doesn’t pop in your mind? Now check out the rest of the titles and the awesome Rafflecopter giveaway!

    UPDATE: The CATALOG has been updated with even lower prices! 

    This Hop is brought to you by

    Fabulosity Reads Book Tours

    13 AUTHORS OVER 3 DAYS

    GENRES: Epic fantasy, Paranorma, Romance, YA

    Tour Link: March Book Frenzy

    Find AMAZING books of unrivaled quality,

    right here on this CATALOGUE.

    GIVEAWAYS

    Check out the prizes the authors are sponsoring:

    FOR READERS

    A KINDLE FIRE

    PLUS

    2 featured eBooks from each author.

    PARTCIPATING BLOGGERS ONLY

    2 X $20

    in cash via paypal or gift card via Amazon (your choice)

    Giveaway Link: MAY Book Festival Giveaway

    REMEMBER! Follow the hop by visiting as many of the blogs on the linky as possible.

    And visit featured authors:

    http://reginajoseph.blogspot.com/

    www.kathryndionne.com

    www.jalpawilliby.com

    http://dianneharman.com/blog/

    http://williambryanmiller.com/

    www.terrymaggert.com

    http://mariagreene.me

    www.cynthiapratt.com

    http://www.wix.com/brokendesire/paintedwire

    www.lindabudzinski.com

    http://lookingonthesunnyside.blogspot.com/

    Book Review Depot Catalogue

    *Please click on the red buttom to read the book synopsis.

    Please comment on and follow as many blogs as you can during the event.

    You have not joined the hop yet? No worries, click on the link and get hooked up.

    *Guide to Joining and Participating in the HOP

    All Book Prices Valid At The Time Of Publishing This Catalogue..

    $0.99 on Kindle
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    a Rafflecopter giveaway

  • Calling All Critiques: Introducing Your Hosts

    As I posted on Monday, MM Jaye writes is part of the upcoming Calling All Critiques cross-blog event. Today’s post is to introduce the bloggers who will be participating, critiquing, and calling everyone they know to help support those brave souls who have shared their work. You can read more about the event here: Calling All Critiques: A Cross-Blog Event.

    Meet Our Hosts

    We have seven fabulous bloggers who will be participating in Calling All Critiques.

    Brian Basham

    Brian grew up and still lives in Va Beach, VA where he spends his time playing with his black lab, Sadie, a.k.a. Inspector Puppy. In his spare time he plays softball, poker, and the occasional video game. Oh, and he writes too. You can read some of his stories for free at his Wattpad page. The first novel in his Virtual Wars series is going through edits and rewrites with no current release date announced. He blogs about writing, publishing, movies, and whatever else he feels like talking about at http://www.brian-basham.com/.

    MM Jaye (me)

    MM Jaye is the pen name of Maria Messini, a bilingual Greek native who lives in Athens with her husband and daughter. She is a certified translator and also teaches the art of translation to young adults. Writing was Maria’s idea of therapy when, back in 2009, her spirits had temporarily nosedived, but she didn’t take it seriously until her first manuscript was completed last year. Since November, she’s been building her author platform aiming at publishing Fate Accomplis, her first contemporary romance, in the fall, along with Fate Captured, a prequel novelette. She blogs at mmjayewrites.com and myfriendsexcerpts.wordpress.com. You can also find her on Twitter @MMJaye or Facebook.com/MMJayeauthor.

    Quanie Miller

    Quanie Miller grew up in New Iberia, Louisiana. She fell in love with reading at an early age and spent most of her time at the Iberia Parish Library discovering authors like R.L. Stine and Christopher Pike (she was often found walking back home from the library with a stack of books that went up to her chin). She holds degrees from Louisiana State University and San Jose State University. She has been the recipient of the James Phelan Literary Award, the Louis King Thore Scholarship, the BEA Student Scriptwriting Award, and the Vicki Hudson Emerging Writing Prize. Her debut novel, It Ain’t Easy Being Jazzy, is a romantic comedy loosely based on her experiences living and working in Silicon Valley. Her first paranormal novel is called The New Mrs. Collins and is slated for a September 2014 release. She lives in Charleston, South Carolina with her husband and is currently, as always, working on another novel. To find out more about Quanie and her works in progress follow her on Twitter @quaniemiller or visit quaniemiller.com and quanietalkswriting.com.

    S. L. Saboviec

    Samantha grew up in a small town in Iowa but now lives in the suburbs of Toronto with her Canadian husband and expatriate cat. In her spare time, she reads, writes, and thinks about reading and writing—along with playing the occasional video game or eight. She’s expecting her first child in September, but pregnancy has only slowed her down a little; her debut release, Guarding Angel, will be available May 19th. She blogs speculative fiction book reviews at the Magic & Mayhem Book Review Blog and tweets about life and writing from @Saboviec.

    M. G. Silverstein

    M.G. Silverstein is a YA fantasy novelist and fantasy genre blogger. She is currently completing her second Bachelor’s degree in English (her first is in Hospitality Management/Culinary Arts). Her debut YA fantasy novel Elemental will be available in 2015.

    Although she considers the Washington, D.C. metro area her favorite place on Earth—she isn’t ‘from’ anywhere. Having lived in 7 states, 14 cities, and 2 different countries, the only place she feels at home is when reading or writing fantasy. You can visit her at www.mgsilverstein.com to hear her musings on both the fantasy genre and writing a fantasy novel.

    Christie Stratos

    Christie Stratos is an editor and award-winning author who lives in the New York area and holds a degree in English Literature. An avid reader of all genres and world literature, Christie reads everything from bestsellers to classics and is always on top of current publishing trends and technology. In her spare time, you can find her playing French Horn for musicals, small ensembles, orchestras, and a 10-year-old community band for which she was a founding member. Christie can be reached through her editing business, Proof Positive, her author website and blog, Twitter, Google+, Facebook, and Goodreads.

    Mike Verbickas

    Mike says: Growing up in a small town, you spend a lot of your time thinking, dreaming and waiting. It’s this experience I credit to why I became a writer.

    A trained journalist and fiction writer, I think I bring a unique mix of skills to the blogosphere. In journalism, you feel most alive when meeting diverse people and experiencing new things. After all, who can’t pass up a good story?

    Only one week left until we begin accepting critiques!

    While you wait, check out all the participating blogs and bloggers:

    We look forward to seeing you back here in a couple weeks.

    Any questions? Leave them in the comments!

  • Calling All Critiques: Introducing Your Hosts

    As I posted on Monday, MM Jaye writes is part of the upcoming Calling All Critiques cross-blog event. Today’s post is to introduce the bloggers who will be participating, critiquing, and calling everyone they know to help support those brave souls who have shared their work. You can read more about the event here: Calling All Critiques: A Cross-Blog Event.

    Meet Our Hosts

    We have seven fabulous bloggers who will be participating in Calling All Critiques.

    Brian Basham

    Brian grew up and still lives in Va Beach, VA where he spends his time playing with his black lab, Sadie, a.k.a. Inspector Puppy. In his spare time he plays softball, poker, and the occasional video game. Oh, and he writes too. You can read some of his stories for free at his Wattpad page. The first novel in his Virtual Wars series is going through edits and rewrites with no current release date announced. He blogs about writing, publishing, movies, and whatever else he feels like talking about at http://www.brian-basham.com/.

    MM Jaye (me)

    MM Jaye is the pen name of Maria Messini, a bilingual Greek native who lives in Athens with her husband and daughter. She is a certified translator and also teaches the art of translation to young adults. Writing was Maria’s idea of therapy when, back in 2009, her spirits had temporarily nosedived, but she didn’t take it seriously until her first manuscript was completed last year. Since November, she’s been building her author platform aiming at publishing Fate Accomplis, her first contemporary romance, in the fall, along with Fate Captured, a prequel novelette. She blogs at mmjayewrites.com and myfriendsexcerpts.wordpress.com. You can also find her on Twitter @MMJaye or Facebook.com/MMJayeauthor.

    Quanie Miller

    Quanie Miller grew up in New Iberia, Louisiana. She fell in love with reading at an early age and spent most of her time at the Iberia Parish Library discovering authors like R.L. Stine and Christopher Pike (she was often found walking back home from the library with a stack of books that went up to her chin). She holds degrees from Louisiana State University and San Jose State University. She has been the recipient of the James Phelan Literary Award, the Louis King Thore Scholarship, the BEA Student Scriptwriting Award, and the Vicki Hudson Emerging Writing Prize. Her debut novel, It Ain’t Easy Being Jazzy, is a romantic comedy loosely based on her experiences living and working in Silicon Valley. Her first paranormal novel is called The New Mrs. Collins and is slated for a September 2014 release. She lives in Charleston, South Carolina with her husband and is currently, as always, working on another novel. To find out more about Quanie and her works in progress follow her on Twitter @quaniemiller or visit quaniemiller.com and quanietalkswriting.com.

    S. L. Saboviec

    Samantha grew up in a small town in Iowa but now lives in the suburbs of Toronto with her Canadian husband and expatriate cat. In her spare time, she reads, writes, and thinks about reading and writing—along with playing the occasional video game or eight. She’s expecting her first child in September, but pregnancy has only slowed her down a little; her debut release, Guarding Angel, will be available May 19th. She blogs speculative fiction book reviews at the Magic & Mayhem Book Review Blog and tweets about life and writing from @Saboviec.

    M. G. Silverstein

    M.G. Silverstein is a YA fantasy novelist and fantasy genre blogger. She is currently completing her second Bachelor’s degree in English (her first is in Hospitality Management/Culinary Arts). Her debut YA fantasy novel Elemental will be available in 2015.

    Although she considers the Washington, D.C. metro area her favorite place on Earth—she isn’t ‘from’ anywhere. Having lived in 7 states, 14 cities, and 2 different countries, the only place she feels at home is when reading or writing fantasy. You can visit her at www.mgsilverstein.com to hear her musings on both the fantasy genre and writing a fantasy novel.

    Christie Stratos

    Christie Stratos is an editor and award-winning author who lives in the New York area and holds a degree in English Literature. An avid reader of all genres and world literature, Christie reads everything from bestsellers to classics and is always on top of current publishing trends and technology. In her spare time, you can find her playing French Horn for musicals, small ensembles, orchestras, and a 10-year-old community band for which she was a founding member. Christie can be reached through her editing business, Proof Positive, her author website and blog, Twitter, Google+, Facebook, and Goodreads.

    Mike Verbickas

    Mike says: Growing up in a small town, you spend a lot of your time thinking, dreaming and waiting. It’s this experience I credit to why I became a writer.

    A trained journalist and fiction writer, I think I bring a unique mix of skills to the blogosphere. In journalism, you feel most alive when meeting diverse people and experiencing new things. After all, who can’t pass up a good story?

    Only one week left until we begin accepting critiques!

    While you wait, check out all the participating blogs and bloggers:

    We look forward to seeing you back here in a couple weeks.

    Any questions? Leave them in the comments!

  • Profound meaning in a fun package: The Power of Six by Nicholas Rossis

    Having read and thoroughly enjoyed Nicholas C. Rossis’ bestselling Pearseus series, I picked up this anthology, knowing that the short story format would make the book even more readable. I was right. I read the stories in one sitting (Simulation Over I had already read on Wattpad).

    An all-powerful computer, an Adam Sandler-esque remote that enables time traveling, a real life/video game mesh, a willing host to an alien form of life, a haunted house/portal to the multiverse and a David-Goliath metaphor are Nicholas’ vehicles to portray his version of the Cartesian doubt: the fallibility of sensory perception. His main themes—ambition, greed, the need for human contact—all lead to questioning pure knowledge. What we see and feel is not necessarily the truth.

    But if this concept sounds profound and philosophical, its delivery is anything but. The stories are very well written with surprising twists, rich detail (where needed) and a general light feel that makes moving from one to the next smooth and easy. What I particularly appreciated was that the main concept interconnected the stories, making this a seamless read. The writer’s choice not to bog the reader down with dozens of names for his stories’ characters also helped. All in all, I found this anthology a fascinating read, and I highly recommend it.

    You can download The Power of Six here: http://amzn.to/1kKVduI

    __________

     About the Author

    Nicholas Rossis was born in 1970 in Athens. Greece. He got his BSc in Engineering from the Technical Institute of Pireaus in 1995, before moving to Edinburgh, Scotland, where he received his PhD in Digital Architecture from the University of Edinburgh.

    In 1995 he founded Istomedia, a web design company that has created some 450 websites todate. He also taught various publishing courses at Napier University between 1997 and 2000.

    In 2000, he moved back to Greece where he has continued working as web designer and teaching design and publishing at various colleges and universities. He has written a score of children’s books, through Niditales, his ongoing collaboration with illustrator Dimitris Fousekis. He has also had numerous SF short stories published in Greek magazines and in Invasion, a SF anthology. Finally, he has written Pearseus, a SF novel.

    Nicholas lives in a forest outside Athens with his lovely wife Electra, beautiful dog and two remarkably silly cats.

    Author Links

    Bloghttp://nicholasrossis.me
    Twitter: https://twitter.com/Nicholas_Rossis
    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/NicholasCRossis
    Site: http://www.nicholasrossis.com
    Pearseus Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/Pearseus
    LinkedIn: http://gr.linkedin.com/pub/nicholas-rossis/0/b7b/122/ 
    Google+ http://google.com/+NicholasRossis

  • Calling All Critiques: A cross-blog event

    We can all use a little help once in a while, can’t we?

    I’m excited to announce that my blog will be part of an upcoming event, Calling All Critiques, a cross-blog critique event open to self-published, traditionally published, and unpublished authors (that would be everyone!). The event will start the weekend of May 24 and run until June 13, adding up to three weeks of critiques of different aspects of novel writing and marketing.

    Christie Stratos, thanks for suggesting me!

    Three weeks of critiques

    The schedule for the weekly critiques is as follows:

    • Week of May 26: First 500 word critique
    • Week of June 2:  Cover art critique
    • Week of June 9:  Book blurb or query letter critique

    Entries will be accepted the weekend before the week’s critiques, with a cutoff of 5 p.m. Eastern Time on Sunday. We have a total of 35 slots, 5 on each of the 7 participating blogs, and the entries will be accepted in the order they were received. The posts will go up throughout the week, 7 each Monday through Friday, one on each blog each day, for a total of 5 per blog. All blogs will link to each other so that critters can easily find the other entries.

    There will be prizes

    What’s an event without prizes? We have two categories of prizes: One lucky winner each week from the entrants and one lucky winner from a Rafflecopter giveaway, chosen by random draw.

    Each winning entrant will have his or her choice of the following prizes:

    Each Rafflecopter winner will win this package:

    • An electronic copy of Guarding Angel by S. L. Saboviec
    • An electronic copy of It Ain’t Easy Being Jazzy by Quanie Miller
    • $10 gift certificate from Amazon

    Interested in having your work critiqued?

    Each week, entrants will have two days to submit their work for critique. When the submission window opens, you (that’s right, you) may submit to an email address that will be provided. You will need to provide the following information:

    Your name/pseudonym:
    Title:
    Genre (include audience, such as YA/Adult, and category):
    Entry:

    Your email will be kept confidential. What you submit is what will be posted, so double- and triple-check your spelling and grammar. (We may correct crazy formatting errors as a result of email quirks, but still, make sure it’s clean before you press send.) You may resubmit an entry, but it goes to the end of the queue: if you submit it past the 35 entry cutoff, you’ll have lost your spot.

    If you’re nervous about participating because you aren’t sure what comments you’re going to get, rest assured that we bloggers are committed to making this a positive event for everyone. Mean-spirited or trolling comments will be deleted. We’ve participated in these events in the past, and for the most part, everyone is helpful and kind.

    That being said, if you don’t want feedback on your entry, don’t submit. Critiques are provided to help you improve your writing. Along with “this worked great for me,” you will get “this didn’t work so great for me” comments. If you don’t want that kind of feedback, please don’t participate.

    Interested in critiquing?

    Yay! Critters are the lifeblood of this event. As the posts go live, one each weekday over the three weeks of the event, please feel free to critique as many or as few as you want. You may want to follow all the participating blogs to get up-to-the-minute information, or we will be tweeting under the hashtag #CACrits.

    The only rule we have is to be constructive. You can say you dislike something, but give reasons why. In fact, you can say you like something, but give reasons why for that, too. Although it’s ultimately up to the author to determine whether to take feedback or not, we grow the most when we understand why something does or doesn’t work.

    Posts will go up in the morning at each of our blogs. We’d love it if you could visit all of us throughout the week:

    Thanks for stopping by!

    We look forward to seeing you back here in a couple weeks.

    Any questions? Leave them in the comments!

  • C.H. Little – WIP Interview

    C. H. Little is the author of “Escape”, a gripping thriller novella set on the exotic island of Menorca, Spain. “Gripping” is not a random promo word; I’ve read “Escape”, thoroughly enjoyed it, and that was my review’s key word. I am, therefore, very pleased that C. H. Little has agreed to be featured in my interview column, as we’d like to know more about herself and her work process.

    Clare, thank you for coming. As a warm up, why don’t you tell us a few things about yourself?

    Well I’m a teacher of English Language and Literature in the North West of England, but have been writing for the past year. My teaching job can be demanding, but I love the challenge of inspiring young people, especially to read and explore new books. I run a creative writing club at school and really enjoy reading the poems and stories that the teenagers I work with create, as well as writing fiction myself in any spare time I have. I am married with two wonderful children who keep me incredibly busy. I have always loved writing, but never created anything really sustained until I wrote and self-published my romantic thriller novella, called Escape, last year. I’m hooked now, and currently working on its sequel.

    Exercise in lean writing: give us a synopsis of your current WIP in under 200 words.

    As I said, it’s a sequel to my thriller novella Escape. It follows a British woman called Kate Morgan as she searches for her missing sister Penny, the central character from the first book. Kate arrives on the beautiful island of Menorca, where Penny was holidaying alone, and begins to try and discover what has happened to her sister. With the assistance of the frustrating Olly, Kate finds that prior to going missing, Penny had been spending time with a mysterious couple who have also since disappeared.  At the same time, a woman is abducted from elsewhere on the island and readers begin to fear for the safety of Penny, and eventually Kate herself.

    I can’t wait to read the sequel! Are you happy with the pace of your work? Do you aim at a specific word count each day?

    I’m generally fairly unhappy with the pace of my work! On a good day I can write a large amount in quite a short time (not always publish-worthy material though!) I usually write in the two days per week when I am not at work teaching and my daughter is at nursery. This gives me around four and a half hours a week to write. What frustrates me is the fact that I can’t currently fit any more writing time than this into my schedule. So in a good week I can manage around 4,000 words, but if I had more hours in which to write, my sequel would be ready far faster!

    Plotter, pantser or both?

    I have tried both with varying degrees of success. I plotted out an entire 60 chapter novel once, and have written 15 chapters of it, but found the entire task so daunting that I put it to one side (one day I WILL finish it). However, my WIP has more than one point of view in its narrative and therefore required quite a bit of plotting. I started without doing this and had to go back and create a clear plan of how the alternating narrative worked, which took me quite a bit of time. Even when I plan my writing quite carefully though, I find the most exciting part is when a character or event takes on a life of its own. Often things happen which I had not planned on happening at all, for example a character who began as simply a bystander in Escape, ended up getting romantically involved with the heroine!

    What’s your worst enemy in getting that first draft finished?

    Time: see my earlier response! I try not to complain, but life is pretty busy and multi-tasking is a must if I’m going to get Escape’s sequel written sooner rather than later.

    Have you experienced “writer’s block” and how do you overcome it?

    Yes, most definitely. I have good days and bad days when writing. Sometimes the story takes care of itself, flowing from pen (make that keyboard) to page with ease, but other times I really don’t know what’s coming next. At that point I try and write another section of the story to re-inspire myself, which I can link up to later, or I go back to my plan and work out where I’m supposed to be up to. Sometimes missing out a chunk and jumping ahead in the story, or writing a scene from a different character’s perspective, really helps me to refocus. Of course, a good old cup of tea often helps too!

    Yes, tea is an “enabler” and not only for the English! Could we take a look at your workspace? Is there a particular place you find inspiring?

    I usually write in our dining room at home, obviously not when we’re eating in there! It’s a lovely space which overlooks the garden and is usually warm and peaceful. The sun is in the garden for most of the day so on a nice day (fairly rare, but we do have them occasionally!) the room feels really cosy and light.

     Now your photo is “pinned” on my Featured Writers’ Workspace Board on Pinterest. A very tranquil ambience there! Apart from Word and Google, do you use any other writing or research tools and apps?

    I use Thesaurus.com all the time, especially when I’m finding myself using the same vocabulary over and over. Dictionary.com is also useful, and since I set my novella in Spain I have used Google Translate to look up the odd Spanish word or phrase. I have regularly used Google to search the net for authentic Spanish names for any new characters. Google maps has proved similarly useful for providing real story locations on the island of Menorca.

    If you use Thesaurus.com, you can imagine how useful it is to me, as English is not my mother tongue! How do you intend to celebrate writing “The End” on your draft?

    Well I’ve only done it once so far and I think I was so surprised that I’d managed it, I forgot to properly celebrate! I think this time I’ll have a large glass of something fizzy with my husband and put off the editing until tomorrow!

    Sounds great! Which book publishing processes are you going to outsource and which are you confident enough to undertake yourself?

    I’m quite proud to say that Escape was all done from home. I edited it myself with help from a number of pre-readers (mostly family members, which is not always a good idea as they’re obviously quite biased!) With the sequel I’m planning to recruit a far wider set of proper beta readers in addition to my family. I was happy, however, that Escape was grammatically accurate when it was published. (I have only had one person tell me of an error which, with Amazon KDP being what it is, was fixed very rapidly!)

    My husband is a computer programmer but also very talented in most things technical, so he helped me enormously. He formatted the novella, set me up with a range of social media links to help promote my book, designed a website for me and even created the book’s cover, which I sometimes think has had more compliments than the book itself! Great, considering he isn’t a graphic designer by trade!

    I’ve said this time and again: the cover of Escape is amazing! I truly can’t imagine a better combination for an indie author: an English teacher with a tech-savvy husband. Lucky you! Do you have any marketing tips or favorite promotional sites you’d like to share?

    I’m still getting to grips with social media to be honest, but I’m probably most at home on Twitter. I have a Facebook page and a Goodreads account, but currently struggle to find the time to really exploit these sites successfully to promote my books. Twitter seems to allow you contact with or exposure to a large amount of people with not too much time investment required (140 characters can be created pretty quickly). I really like Twitter now I’ve become more comfortable with the way it works.

    I’d also recommend Buffer, which allows me to stock up new Tweets in preparation for days when I’m at work and know I won’t have time to create any. The first level of Buffer is free and allows you to store up to ten Tweets (as well as ten separate Facebook posts), which takes you over two days. It publishes one Tweet every four hours or so throughout the day, spacing them out and therefore maximizing the amount of people who see them, taking into consideration the time differences between Europe and the States, for example.

    Setting up a Twitter scheduling service is in my immediate plans as well. Is “thriller” the genre you will brand yourself with or do you see yourself branching out in the future?

    No, I think I’m still finding my genre. I have enjoyed writing in the thriller genre but have also had comments that my writing could partly qualify as “chick-lit”. As a teacher of young people I am also considering writing for Young Adults, and as I love dystopian fiction myself I would love to have a go at creating some kind of dystopian world at some point in the future. Watch this space!

    Would you like to share with us links where we can find you and your work?

    Escape on Amazon US

    Escape on Amazon UK

    Site: www.chlittle.com

    Twitter: @chlittleauthor

    Facebook: facebook.com/chlittleauthor

     

    Thank you, Clare, you and best of luck with the sequel to Escape!