Monday, August 19, 2013

Interview: Jade C. Jamison

Author Interview of the Week

Meet author of Bullet, Jade C. Jamison!

Photograph by Cyndi Jamison
What made you want to be an author?

There was never a "defining moment."  I was born a writer.  As soon as I could put pen to paper, I had to tell stories and write poems and plays.  I never had a choice in the matter.  I've always been compelled to write and wrote my first "book" in middle school.  Writing is fulfilling, and there's something to be said about creating a reality that doesn't really exist.  More than that, though, I often don't know all the details of the stories I'm writing until they're down on paper...and even I encounter some surprises on occasion.  That keeps it fun for me as well.  But what made me want to be an author?  There was never any thought to it.  I just was one.

Who has inspired you the most?

In the author world, two people.  Well, that's not true.  There are so many, and I could fill up a page just rattling off a list of names.  That said, there are two (sorry, can't narrow it down more than that) authors who have been and continue to be an inspiration to me.  One, Stephen King.  Holy crap.  He is by far the most prolific writer on the planet, and the man just keeps going.  I also believe he has written the best, most practical guide to creative writing that's ever been written (On Writing:  A Memoir of the Craft).  In the creative writing classes I used to teach, I always recommended this book to my students.  Yes, there are other good ones, but what makes King's so good is it's not a textbook.  The second part, where he gets into the nuts and bolts, is a simple "guide" to writing.  He doesn't pull punches, either.  But I find myself going back to that book over and over, because it's just so damn good.  I love his fiction too.  Misery is still one of my favorite books, all these years later.  Toni Morrison is also a huge inspiration to me.  The woman can weave a story like no other, and every time I reread one of her books, I'm simply blown away.  She can paint a picture with words and she is a poet.  Her stories cut to the core, and many of them have touched me deeply.  BelovedThe Bluest Eye, and Paradise...I don't understand how anyone could read those books and put them down not having changed emotionally.  She makes you think about who you are and what you believe, what you value, and what you hold dear.  She is absolutely incredible.

Can you tell us about some of your earlier days of writing?

When I was twelve?  Haha.  When my children were young, I would go through periods of trying to become traditionally published.  I'd had success (under another name) with poetry, short stories, academic writing, and journalism, but being published as a novelist continued to elude me.  I would throw the feelers out there (query letters with synopses) every once in a while when I'd finish a book.  I got a lot of nice rejections.  Then life would take over and the need to be published would go on the back burner.  I never stopped writing, though, because it's a compulsion.  Some rejections were form rejections, but many were personal, and one I remember in particular said I had a strong writing voice and a great story, but it wasn't quite what they were looking for.  I felt like, in the writing world, I was always the bridesmaid and never the bride.  But I couldn't stop writing.  I just stopped writing query letters.
Then, two and a half years ago, a very close friend of mine (Stacy Gail, an author with Samhain and Carina Press) landed a publishing contract.  If you think I write a lot, you should meet Stacy.  She puts me to shame.  She and I were chatting as we often do, and I felt the burning desire to submit to a publisher again.  I was working on my most current compulsion (Tangled Web) and had no intention of doing anything with it; I just had to get it out of my head and onto paper.  Talking to Stacy, though, I got the itch again.  Sure, I had to write; it was in my blood, after all, but writers also want to be read.  I could have gone my whole life with all those manuscripts in my trunk, but I wanted more.  By early spring, I had my manuscript with beta readers and I was drafting a query letter (ugh!).  Then Stacy mentioned a successful woman by the name of Amanda Hocking (perhaps you've heard of her?), and the rest is history.  After doing some research, I published Tangled Web on Amazon for the Kindle in April of 2011...and the rest is history.

How has your life considerably changed since you've been published?

It's been a slow haul, but just recently things have started to change quite a bit.  Up until May, I had worked two jobs forever!  I left my teaching job in May and I hope to leave my other job within the next three years.  And I have made some close friends as well, women I never would have met had I not been a writer.  Oh...I also do less housework and more Facebook now.  But...I see an end to the nine-to-five job very soon.  About damn time.


What sparked the idea for Bullet and the books that follow?

Bullet was actually the first adult book I had written and finished.  I was eighteen when I wrote it (although, at the time, it was called Bottom of My Heart).  I was thinking about that silly book last fall and turning it over in my mind.  The premise had promise but it was too fantastic and silly to work.  I won't tell you why, but let's just say I was, at the time I wrote it, as naive as Valerie.  But as I mulled that old story over in my head, I could sense the potential.  One night, I was driving home from the college and it just hit me.  I figured out the perfect way to make it work.  In the original story, Val just wound up being pulled into the band because of her friendship with the band.  That wasn't realistic, though, because Val had no vocal training, no musical background.  But what if she were a writer and her lyrics blew them away?  What if her words put theirs to shame?  That's how Bottom of My Heart matured into Bullet.  The band's name really was Bullet in that original manuscript too.  The sex scenes I wrote at eighteen were embarrassing and awkward--laughable!  And I had two endings I'd written back then.  Finally, Val's reason for not being in the band in the present was different from what you read in Bullet (that she needed surgery).  But--if it hadn't been for that book I'd written back in college, fueled by Dokken's Under Lock and Key cassette--Bullet probably would never have crossed my mind.

You're a fan of metal music yes? How has that specific genre inspired or helped "get your juices flowing" with the books you write?

Are you kidding?  Am I a fan of metal?  ;)  Yes.  I live, breathe, sleep, eat, and drink metal music.  Eighteen-year-old me was much like Valerie.  I wanted to be in a band, but I heard from all sides (family, friends, college professors) how unrealistic it was.  Back in the eighties, women in metal were rare.  Yes, they existed (Lita Ford was my idol), but metal was (and still is) a boys' club.  I didn't have much musical training and had little aptitude for it (save being able to sing on key), but I could write like a mother.  If I couldn't be in a band (although I was in a kick ass air guitar band), I could imagine it.

More than that, I don't go a day without listening to lots and lots of music, especially when I'm writing (right now, as a matter of fact, I'm listening to Glamour of the Kill's The Summoning).  When I have music playing and I'm writing, the rest of the world--the real world--disappears (even when I'm not writing a rock star book).  If I didn't have music in my life, I would be a very sad person.  When I'm angry, I headbang...so it's also a release.  It keeps me from being a bitter, angry, mean person.  I feel emotions from music too, and sometimes I'll play music just to get in the mood I should be writing about.  I might not be a musician, but music is an integral part of my life; it's part of who I am. 
Yes, dad, I still listen to that "crap."  :)

What has been the best experience so far on your journey as an author?
Photo by Jade C. Jamison

Just one?  Well, I just hit 3000 Likes on Facebook and 2000 followers on Twitter, and I have to say that kicks ass.  And there are so many other experiences...I just can't pick one.  Getting on some of Amazon's Top 100 lists when I published Everything But was awesome, and Bullet sales far surpassed my expectations as well, getting high on Amazon charts.  Let's see.  What else?  The first time Jerry Horton (guitarist for Papa Roach) tweeted me back, you would have thought I'd died.  And it's also cool when huge bands follow me first. I've also made some best friends on this journey, women I never would have met had I not been a writer.  My first (and only, so far) blog tour was pretty cool too.  And every time I get a four- or five-star review is wonderful as well.  The best experience thus far, though?  Probably being invited to my first book signing (Naughty Mafia Sunday Sinners in August).  I got the email and called my husband, squealing.  That was when I felt like it was all real...only "real" authors are invited to book signings, right?  That kicked ass.  And I know it's just the beginning.  (I have a second book signing in April of 2014!!!)

Can you give us some insight on any upcoming projects?
Photo by Jade C. Jamison

Yes!  I'm two-thirds of the way done with Rock Bottom, the second Bullet book.  Bullet was going to be a stand alone, but readers begged for more, and I was happy to give it to them.  It will be published the first week of September.  The next Nicki Sosebee book, Fake, is about one-fourth of the way done as well, and I hope to have it done and ready to one click in three or four weeks.  I've also started writing Seal All Exits(Tangled Web #3), but it has a long way to go.  And...last but not least, readers have also demanded that I make the story "Be Careful What You Wish For" (in Quickies) into a full blown series as well.  Again, who am I to argue with my readers?  So I've been mulling it over and have figured out the first book.  I just need to write it.  And...I always have lots of other story ideas.  These are just the ones for this year, the foreseeable future.  :)  There are at least four more Nicki books in that series, four more Bullet books, and three more Tangled Web books.  There will probably be four books in the new series I'll be starting this fall (the one based on "Be Careful"), so I have plenty to keep me busy.

What advice can you give to any upcoming authors?

First off, read Stephen King's On Writing.  I can't emphasize that enough.  I don't care if you've read twenty other books on creative writing.  King's is the best by far.  Second (and this is advice King himself gives), write a lot.
Once you have something you've written that you think is high quality, have your work read.  Take feedback.  The best way to do this is to find a group of writers near you.  Get together frequently and read each other’s work.  Then offer honest feedback—both critical and praising.  My philosophy (and this comes from being an English instructor) is that every story has something worthwhile about it, even if it needs work.  You can tell someone gently what needs work.  Don’t hesitate to tell the person what is good too, though, because otherwise she might toss out the whole damn thing…and we don’t want that.  Can’t find a group?  Organize your own—in your community or online.  Or take a creative writing class.  Read widely too (another brilliant bit of King advice).  Don’t just read in the genre you plan to write.  Branch out, because you’ll learn so much more and it will improve your writing.
You can also read the following advice on my website, but in case you haven't read it, here goes:  
If your grammar, spelling, and/or use of punctuation is atrocious, have an expert fix your work.  This piece of advice should perhaps be number one, but your story comes first.  That said, some readers will be forgiving, while others will not.  Again, I’m going to play the teacher card.  I used to tell my students when they would complain about instructors grading them down for poor grammar that while your content might be solid and well thought out, a paper riddled with errors can be confusing and hard to read.  Your readers just might not have the patience to wade through your book.  This is an area where you should spend a little money.  It will pay off in the long run.  It also doesn’t hurt to have a few beta readers along the way who are willing to give you feedback not only on editorial problems but also other things that might require revision—things like pacing, dialogue, and the like.  And, while you're at it, grow a pair.  If you want to be good, you need to listen to criticism.  You won’t always want to make changes and that’s okay, but listen, because a lot of times your beta readers might be onto something.  It's best to develop a thick skin before you publish, because I promise you won’t always get five-star gushing reviews…no matter how good your story is.

This one I learned from Stephen King (tired of hearing me rave about that book yet?):  Tell the truth.  No, I don’t mean write nonfiction.  I mean feel the story; listen to your characters.  They will tell you where to go and what they are going to do.  Are you always going to like it?  Hell no!!!  Your characters are going to piss you off, make you cry, and frustrate the hell out of you…just like they will your readers.  And that’s good.  If your readers want a boring book with flawless characters, I can recommend a few.  Remember…you’re not perfect and neither are your characters.  Early in my writing days (pre-publication), I’d censor my characters.  They’d say damn on paper when in my head they really said f*ck.  I don’t censor them anymore (and you’ll never read a book like that from me).  They say and do what they’re going to do.  I’m merely a scribe.  And that’s the way it should be.


Thanks so much, Jade for interviewing with us! Don't forget to follow Jade on one of her outlets listed below!



Want to get your hands on a copy of her books? Click the links below!

Photo by Jade C. Jamison

Interview: Sarah Daltry

Author Interview of the Week

Meet author of the upcoming novel Forget Me Not, Sarah Daltry!


What made you want to be an author?

I love telling stories. Reality is boring. Since I was a kid, I was always trying to live in another world. I love to read. I love movies. I love video games, I love the theatre. Stories are what make my life what it is. So writing was another part of that. I wanted to tell stories and give the world what it gave me - a place to go. A place to disappear.

Who has inspired you the most?

Writers in general inspire me. Every writer has the same story. Write, write, write - only to be rejected over and over. Then, finally, a spark of hope - which results in bad reviews. But the writer keeps going. Why? Because we have to keep going. The fact that writers are constantly told they're not good enough, that they'll never be good enough, and yet they refuse to listen makes them inspirational people as a group. 

Can you tell us about some of your earlier days of writing?

It's tough, because I've been writing since I could put a pen to paper, but I only published my work recently. So my early days are upon me in a lot of ways and, yet, in other ways, I have been doing this forever. 

How has your life considerably changed since you've been published?

The biggest change for me is that I am a naturally shy person. I don't like to talk about myself at all. Being a writer means acting like you think people should read what you write. It is really hard for me to do that. I feel so guilty when I promote a book. Like I am wasting someone's time. When I see sales, a part of me feels so undeserving of it. Like they only bought it because I made them buy it, because I won't shut up about my books. Overcoming that is tough. I have to be an active participant in my promotions. I have to be all over social media. These are things I just don't do in my personal life. I don't even have a personal Facebook!

What made you choose to write erotica?

Sex is complicated. In so many ways, we live in a world that demonizes sex. Yet at the same time, it sells it to us everywhere. We get mixed messages. You turn on HBO and every show has tons of sex. Even when it doesn't make sense. But then you turn on the news and some politician is being raked over the coals for using an escort service. Now, don't get me wrong. I believe in marriage vows and monogamy, but if the politician is single, we still take issue with it. Why? Who cares? So the guy (or girl) likes sex. Who doesn't?!

Writing erotica is a chance to say to the world - hey, you know what? People like sex. And it's especially important to me, because erotica writers are predominantly women as are the readers. Women like sex. This isn't news, but people act like it is. We accept Coors ad campaigns about giant-breasted twins, but when mothers and wives devour Fifty Shades of Grey, it's news. Go figure.

Your covers are very revealing! What can readers expect to experience with your books?

I feel like covers should tell you what to expect as a reader. My stories are graphic. The short stories have no plot, just a premise and a lot of sex ("Touch of Venus" is an exception. It has a faint hint of a plot and most of the story is the build up to the sex). My new novel, Forget Me Not, is a New Adult erotic romance, but the core theme is a sexual and emotional awakening. The one cover that I think reflects something different is Bitter Fruits and that's because the novel is more romance than erotica. The sex is there and it's not subtle, but if you took it out, the story would be fully intact. 

If someone buys my books or stories, they know what they're getting. A cover image of two people having sex against a wall is not going to be much more than people having sex against a wall! 

What has been the best experience so far on your journey as an author?

Getting offers on Bitter Fruits. Because as much as I like self publishing (I'm a control freak), there is something exciting about being told you made the cut.

Can you give us some insight on any upcoming projects?

Forget Me Not is out soon. It's a novel about college students and it's loaded with sex and angst and drama. I'm writing another novel due out in September with no title yet and really little more than a vague idea. It's about adults, though, and I expect it to be more romance than erotica. The sex scenes will still be there, but they may be tamer. They may not be. The characters will tell me when we get to that point.Bitter Fruits will be re-released this winter and I am also working on the sequel to it, Immortal Star. There will be at least three books in the series.

What advice can you give to any upcoming authors?

Ignore everything everyone tells you. Okay, maybe not everything (listen to editors and betas, mostly), but have faith in what you know. If you feel like your plot is weak and someone tells you it's weak, fix it. But if you are completely sure that it isn't, don't throw it all away for someone else. This requires you to be VERY honest with yourself. Our pride often tells us that we're right, even when our heart knows we are not. BUT I think it's crucial that an author remember that opinions are just that. Because if writers listened to all the "top ten tips for writers," most classics would never exist. Remember - JK Rowling was rejected numerous times because there was no market for Harry Potter. Sometimes people are wrong. Sometimes they're idiots. Know how to tell.

Thanks so much, Sarah for interviewing with us! Don't forget to follow Sarah on one of her outlets below!


Interested in reading some of her works? Click any of the links below!

COMING SOON!



Head on over to the blog tour for more goodies!

Hosted by Book Enthusiast Promotions.


Friday, August 16, 2013

Love Lost Cover Reveal

Love Lost

Model: Joe Marvullo
Cover Designed by Rochelle McGrath from Shamrock Cover Designs

Synopsis: 

 
Love can come into your life in an instant, and leave just as quickly....
 
Jason Straiz is a New York detective working on a case to bring down a major crime lord.
He keeps his life simple. Work. Family. Friends.
Until he meets Selene.
 
Selene is a lawyer on a mission.
Her goal is to bring down the monster that has been terrorizing her for years.
When she meets Jason, the attraction is intense. 
When Selene realizes Jason is after the same person she is, he becomes a complication.
When his case and her mission collide, will her secrets destroy a future they could have together?
Can he handle the truth about her?
 
Can love truly conquer all or is there a limit?

Author Bio:

I am a 31 yr old NJ native, not to be mistaken for the craziness that is the NJ Housewives or Jersey Shore!   J   I have two children, who are my life and family that makes me want to scream at times, but I love them.    I started my affair with reading and writing at a young age.  I loved where books took me, and wished for the day when I would meet my dream boat.  (Yes, I referred to my future man as a dream boat.  Child of the 80s here!)   I grew up on Stephen King, Nora Roberts, and anything my library would let me borrow.  I would always grab a notebook and start writing about the books I read because I wanted the story to continue.  I never took it seriously until I had a friend a few years ago tell me that I needed to publish my work after I wrote down a short story.  My reaction was…yeah, right!  The words stuck with me and I was constantly asked, “Did you write more? Are you done?”   A back injury put my writing on hold for almost 2 yrs and last year, I found the WIP file and started reading.  Then, I started writing and adding to it.   That little dream turned story will be my debut novel, Love Lost.   


Contact Links:


There's a nifty little giveaway going on on her Facebook page. You know you love a good giveaway. Head that way and get you some! It'll only be up from August 16-23. 

Keep an eye out for Love Lost, coming to you on September 30th!

Thursday, August 15, 2013

COVER REVEAL: Crashed by Danielle A. Elwood

Synopsis: Emily Taylor is a twenty-six year old event planner who has made a career out of dating; with the majority of it ending up as a complete nightmare. She is driven, motivated, and rising to the top in her career…but not in her love life. However, a random car accident will change her life forever.

Avery Martin is a country boy stuck in the city working his dream job of being a fire fighter. Over the years he has given up a lot, including dating, to focus on his career. Responding to a car accident one day he becomes overly involved with the woman he is rescuing.

Will these two find love, or will amnesia, and one crazy ex cost them the future they might have had?






About the Author:


Danielle A. Elwood is a blogger by trade who started writing her first romance novel Take Me Out as a hobby in 2012. She is a avid romance novel lover herself,  which inspired her to take the leap into writing her own. She was born and raised in Connecticut and is relocating to Florida in April of 2013 with her family.

Danielle is a mother of three – Camden (5), Benjamin (4), and Addison(2) and has written for various popular parenting publications such as Disney owned Babble.com, as well as the Online Woman’s Magazine The Broad Side where she is also the managing editor, and her own website Danielle Elwood Dot Com, which is a parenting based Mom blog. 
Some of her inspirations include: Abbi Glines, Melody Anne, Laura Kaye, Cherrie Lynn, and Colleen Hoover.


Don't forget to check out Danielle A. Elwood on her outlets listed below!
Facebook
Danielle A. Elwood Author
Danielle's Goodreads







Make sure you check out Crashed on Goodreads!
Goodreads-Crashed












{Review}

Crashed is an exciting ride that keeps you interested the entire time you're reading it. I completely fell in love with Emily and Avery. They are a very down-to-earth couple and the give hope to couples that fall in love right off the bat.

It's an exciting story that take turns and curves that you don't see coming at all! I love a good book that gives me romance, thrills and a happily ever after all in one.

Crash is definitely a must read for 2013. If you don't have a copy, you'd better get one fast! You don't wanna miss this!

Join us on her blog tour. Crashed stops here on September 9th, the same day her interview with us goes live. Don't miss it!




Tuesday, August 13, 2013

Armed With Steele Book Tour




What happens undercover, stays under covers.
Jessica Hartley is looking for answers surrounding the mysterious car accident that nearly claimed the life of her best friend. She’s willing to risk it all, even her fledgling business, to find the person responsible and bring them to justice.
Nate Steele is more than willing to help Jessica, but for reasons all his own. He’s been watching the infamous Maxwell Office Solutions for some time now, convinced there’s more going on than meets the eye. When his chief issues a cease and desist order yet again, Nate has no choice but to accept inexperienced Jessica as an undercover partner outside the letter of the law. 
Will Jessica and Nate be able to flush out Maxwell’s elusive villain, or will their growing attraction for each other sabotage their undercover ploy? Motives aren’t always what they seem when Jessica finds herself armed with Steele.
CONTENT WARNING: Beware drool-worthy men in uniform, touchy-feely coworkers, and vindictive ex-girlfriends.


About Kyra Jacobs:

Kyra Jacobs is a happily married, mother of two, who grew up in Indiana. When she’s not pounding out scenes for her next book, she’s likely goofing around with her husband and kids or elbow-deep in snapdragons and Lamb’s ear in one of her many flower gardens. She also loves to golf (though, golf doesn’t really love her) and to jam on the bass in Guitar Hero.
Be sure to stop by her blog, http:/www.indianawonderer.wordpress.com for updates on her writing journey and other musings as seen through the eyes of this Midwestern writer. 

Connect with Kyra!



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Monday, August 12, 2013

COVER REVEAL: Skipping Stones by J.B. McGee





Blurb:

They say there are five stages of grief: denial, anger, bargaining, depression, and acceptance.

Not everyone will grieve in this order, nor will everyone go through every stage. It’s during the stage of denial when Alex Hart meets Andrew Foster. He takes her one-step closer to acceptance: the stage when new, meaningful relationships are formed. The stage when the realization occurs that this is now the new state of normal.

Just when Alex thinks she is on her way to healing, she enters the bargaining phase. That’s the phase where you wonder what you could have done differently. You wonder “what if?” Specifically, what if the ones you loved hadn’t left you?

Leaving…this is what makes heading off to war so difficult and frightening for Alex. She knows all too well what it’s like to be the one on the losing end of life, which is why she’s made it her personal mission in life to save as many lives as possible. The extreme high she gets from treating trauma victims turns into Alex’s own form of therapy, or so she thinks.

When faced with her world being turned upside down, Alex may just find that her true therapy is in the one who has always saved her.









Author Links

Bio:

J.B. McGee was born and raised in Aiken, South Carolina. After graduating from South Aiken High School, she toured Europe as a member of the 1999 International Bands of America Tour, playing the clarinet. While attending Converse College, an all-girls school in Spartanburg, South Carolina, she visited Charleston often. It quickly became one of her favorite vacation spots. She met her husband, Chad, during Christmas break her freshman year, and they married in 2001 and she moved back to her home town. 

In 2005, the couple welcomed their first son, Noah. J.B. finished her Bachelor of Arts degree in Early Childhood Education at the University of South Carolina-Aiken in 2006. During her time studying children's literature, a professor had encouraged her to become a writer.

In 2007, she welcomed their second child, Jonah, and she became a stay at home mom/entrepreneur. In 2009, the found out their two children and J.B. have Mitochondrial Disease. In 2011, a diagnosis also was given to Chad. Please take a moment and learn more about Mitochondrial Disease. Awareness is key to this disease that has no cure or treatments.


J.B. McGee and her family now reside in Buford, Georgia, to be closer to their children's medical team. After a passion for reading had been re-ignited, J.B. decided to finally give writing a shot. Broken (This Series), is her first book and first series. 


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August Spotlight Author: Carol Kauffman

August Spotlight Author

Yours Truly,

Carol Kauffman



1.     My favorite flower is a tiny little lavender blue wildflower than only blooms in May after a big rain in the woods; I think it’s called a bluette, but I’m not sure.  You can’t buy them anywhere; you have to go tromping through the woods or park to discover them.  But I do like pink roses, too.
2.     When I was a child, I used to love to take watches apart, with all the little silver and gold gears and cogs, all fitting in together so securely.  I always had pieces leftover when I re-assembled them IF they ever got reassembled, and they never ever kept time again.
3.     Once my father left me in the car alone (age four, windows cracked) while he ran an errand and I took apart the dashboard.  Who knew it was held together with just a few little screws?  And he just laughed and said, “Okay, honey, now you have to help Daddy put the car back together again.”
4.     I was an elementary school teacher for thirty-five years.  I taught first grade most of those years.  I am retired now.
5.     My favorite place to visit is Venice, Italy.  I love Venice!  It is so beautiful and timeless and awe-inspiring.  Everyone should visit Venice at least once, in my opinion.  And hurry up because it’s sinking.
6.     I used to like to cook until my husband went vegan on me.
7.     My favorite songs are ”Book of Love” by Peter Gabriel, “Old Time Rock and Roll” by Bob Seger, and “Only Time” by Enya.  And “Someone Like You” by Adele.
8.     Chocolate.  Anytime.  Enough said.
9.     I would like to visit Scotland and England.
10. I have a red shorthaired dachshund named KC.
11. My favorite car ever was my metallic teal 1995 Chevy Blazer, the perfect vehicle for one who likes to color outside the lines.
12. My novels are neither sexually explicit nor graphically violent.
13. I’ve written six full-length novels and one novella to date.  Five are in the Time After Time series.
14. My favorite food is anything Italian.  Because I am.  Italian.
15. I like to read, everything except horror and zombies.
16. My favorite US television show is “The Big Bang Theory”.  My favorite British television shows are “Doctor Who”, preferably with the Tenth Doctor, and “Midsomer Murders.”
17. My favorite sculpture is “The Thinker” by Auguste Rodin.
18. My favorite painting is “Water Lily Pond” by Claude Monet.
19. I have a pond.  I grow water lilies.  The white ones are my favorite.
20. Parker Kaufman and I have a blog called Vision and Verse.  It’s a blog about art, making art, writing, contemporary artists and authors, and what inspires them.
21. I have been happily married to my wonderful husband, William for the last thirty-five years.
22. I am from Ohio.
23. I used to quilt.  I loved it and found it very relaxing.  I made four hand-stitched quilts.  Then I starting writing and that was the end of quilting.
24. I think the Grand Canyon in Arizona is one of the most magical places on earth.  You stand there, on the rim, looking down into the chasm and you are mesmerized by the incredible beauty and sheer size of it.  It makes you realize all how all those things you worried about and fussed over were truly insignificant.  It makes you realize just how small we are, but still, somehow, we manage to fit into the scheme of things.  Haven’t been there?  GO.
25. I play Bridge.  My Bridge group is called “The Four Hearts.”  It is excellent exercise for the other half of my brain.


Oh snap, we've got a fellow Doctor Who lover on our hands. I believe our very own Angel would love you, Carol! 

Be on the lookout for our interview with the lovely and talented Carol on September 23!