Saturday, May 30, 2009

Star Trek


I recently saw Star Trek with a friend and really enjoyed it. It was fun and a wonderful look at characters I've grown up with--Captain Kirk, Spock, Bones, Scottie. I loved seeing how they all came together to be the crew of the Enterprise. The villain was appropriately bad, and of course, Captain Kirk, Spock and the crew saved the day. I'm really not a Trekkie, but it was nice taking a walk down memory lane. And good triumphed over evil. That's always a bonus.

Thursday, May 28, 2009

Elizabeth Baker's interview


This week I'm hosting Robin Shope with her book, Wildcard and Elizabeth Baker with her book, Living with Eeyore. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 31st) evening.


Elizabeth Baker's interview:

1.What made you start writing?

In some ways, I think I have always been a writer. To me, writing is something that is in your blood. Stories occupy your thoughts and turning sentences over in your mind is habitual. I think I would probably be writing even if I never published anything, but I’ll admit that the process is a lot more gratifying when there is an audience and even more so if you are getting paid!

2.How long have you been writing? When did you sell your first book?

In 1975, my husband and I were ranchers. Times were tough and it looked as though we might lose the farm. I was a stay at home mom with several small children and limited education, but for about a year I had been writing a book simply because I felt I had something to say and had to say it. The idea of making money from the work was only a distant hope.

When I found an old Sunday School paper that had an address for Victor Books on the back, my pastor, who was also my brother-in-law, suggested I send them a letter and the chapters I had finished thus far. I didn’t even know if Victor published books or just Sunday School literature, but as I said, times were rough and although I was shy and embarrassed (rightly so, considering the quality of the script!) I knew it was a step I had to take someday and they might pay something, so I wrote the letter and mailed the pages.

As it turned out, the manuscript must have been exactly what they were looking for and it arrived at precisely the right time. I had a contract back in my hand in two weeks. Going that fast from query letter to contract was (and is) unheard of, but it happened. At the time, I didn’t even know contracts were involved when books were published and had no idea what a miracle it was to get accepted that fast.

The publishing field was very different thirty-five years ago. Today, I don’t think my package of hand-typed, misspelled, smudged sheets would even be opened much less taken seriously. I remember how shocked I was when I read the galley proofs and learned for the first time that the word “husband” had a “d” on the end of the word. I now joke that the reason for the misspelling was because, when yo from Tex-as, husban don’t got no “d” but it is amazing that the publisher had the grace to take the work seriously.

Yet, all jokes aside, the core of the book and the passion that drove the project grew from a single source: I burned with something specific to say, and—in spite of my personal lack of education, flawed the grammar and spelling—they felt I said it very well. Victor Press is no longer in business, but they were more than gracious as they worked to bring a good and solid book from my labored inadequacies and dreams. I still occasionally get comments on that publication. It sold better than anything I have published since and I would love to see an updated version eventually reprinted

3.How do you handle rejections?

Regardless of the dramatic start of my career, I have had LOTS of experience with rejections and they still disappoint, but since I have been in the business for thirty years, it is easier to put them in perspective now than it was once. When I began, rejections caused much more pain. I think one reason for this was because, as a writer, I’m sort of self-taught. There was no schooling in the subject, no peer group or class or mentor to help me understand why I might have been rejected or to encourage and help me see individual rejections within the broader scope of a career. It was tough and I gave up more than once.

4.Why do you write?

As I mentioned earlier, writing seems to be so much a part of who I am it would difficult NOT to write. I think I would be scribbling on something one way or another even if I had never published. It might be a lame effort at poetry or journaling or writing out lessons to teach or letters or even memoirs for my children, but I would be writing.

However, writing for publication is an entirely different matter. I think I keep submitting scripts to editors for several different reasons. One aspect is rather selfish; I simply enjoy an audience. But, by far a more compelling reason is that I honestly feel I have something to say that is worth hearing.

5.What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?

There is so much about life I enjoy that I am never at a loss when a free moment presents itself. I don’t choose to own a television, so I really enjoy G rated movies at the dollar show. I grow organic vegetables and, of course, there is always something that needs to be done in the garden. I could read forever and constantly have one to five books going. Bible study is pleasurable especially when I’m chasing some obscure point that is tantalizing me. I could add many other things to the list, but those are probably the top four. In addition, with fifteen grandchildren and five great-grands, just touching base with them all is a delightful challenge.

6.What are you working on right now?

I just finished Personality According to Pooh for Standard Publishers. It’s available now by advance order from Amazon, and will be on shelves the first week of July. That was a particularly fun book; especially the personality quiz that lets the reader choose their own “Pooh-sonality”.

I have my first novel complete and hope to get it out to my agent soon. That work was very different than writing non-fiction and the process was a challenge. The book is a fantasy/suspense about angels and how they relate to the people of a small town. The setting is a church in East Texas and the book follows both humans and the angels for one day with each chapter marked by time rather than chapter title. The book currently has the working title of An Ordinary Sunday in Thyme and I hope to get it out to my agent within the next couple of weeks.

I am also developing a new web site that I hope to have on line by the middle of June. It will feature monthly book give-aways, a blog that encourages readers to submit their own story of how God has moved in their lives and a gift basket of various goodies that is given away each quarter. In addition, I am expanding my speaking career and developing seminars on my most recent non-fiction books.

Between all of this and marketing, I guess you could say that I stay pretty busy.

7.Do you put yourself into your books/characters?

Certainly! Every character I have ever written about is in reality some aspect of myself. I believe there is much commonality among all human beings. Under the skin and in the private world of emotions and thoughts we are all a lot alike. So, when one of my characters—whether fiction or non-fiction—behaves or thinks a certain way, I feel it as being very similar to something I have done or felt. And, if I can do a really good job of boxing those behaviors and feelings inside words, I find the characters feel familiar to my readers, too. I guess you could say every character is me, but every character is also my reader in one way or another.

8.Tell us about the book you have out right now.

Personality According to Pooh may be the “most recent” by the time someone reads this post. But, at this very moment, the one that is ‘right now” is Living With Eeyore, How to Positively Love the Negative People in Your Life. Because of such close similarity in the books and the fast approaching launch date of Personality According to Pooh, it is hard to say which one is “right now.”I think the two words that best describe both books would be “practical” and “fun.” Writing both of these was an enjoyable project from beginning to end. Not all my books have been that way. Some were challenges and some touched on dark subjects. But, these have been a delight.

It was easy to write about living with Eeyore because I live with Eeyore! Mom and I are both widows and have formed a household together for almost twenty years. We are poles apart in personality, yet we manage to be a team through a LOT of mutual grace. The fact that she has a personality like Eeyore was a joke between us. I would even sometimes say, “Now, Eeyore…” It was a way to use humor to defuse moments of tension. The book was pretty much a natural outgrowth of that joke. (By the way, my personality is Rabbit and you can read more about that in the Pooh book)

In the original Pooh books, Milne did a masterful job of describing Eeyore, as well as all the characters. Most professional evaluation systems divide human personality into four/eight/or sixteen possible profiles. Milne used eight and Eeyore was one of the more prominent. Eeyore’s negative outlook, dry sense of humor and stubbornness have remained famous for generations, which, of course, is the mark of a true classic. It is also evidence that Eeyore is someone we easily identify in our own life.

9.Do you have any advice for other writers?

I think the first thing I would say is to join groups with other writers. That support and feedback can’t be over emphasized. It is also necessary read extensively and actually do the writing, not just dream about being a writer someday. There is so much more opportunity now than when I began writing in the early ‘70s. The Internet makes it possible to connect with other writers and even have your work professionally critiqued. There are writer’s conferences and training for ever level of expertise. Most of all, if you want to be a writer, you have got to face the fact that it is hard work. I suppose out there somewhere in space and time perhaps someone became inspired then sat down and the great American novel flowed from their finger tips, but I have never heard of them. Learn to spell. Learn grammar. Learn to listen to your critics. And, most of all, if you want to be a writer, then WRITE.

10.How important is faith in your books?

Faith is the central guiding issue of everything I have ever written. It is not an “add on” or something that I try to put in each book. Instead, it is like an undercurrent: Powerful and ever present even thought not always obvious on the surface. Because I most often write non-fiction in first person, there is an autobiographical element nature to much of my work and because faith is as much a part of me as my eye color and the air I breathe, it comes across in everything I say. I try to let that flow naturally, otherwise, I find my work becomes “preachy” and readers are turned off.

11.What themes do you like to write about?

That is a difficult question. I think you might best describe my theme as God’s activity in the lives of ordinary people. Both my fiction and non-fiction is practical, down to earth and centered on the application of God to daily living.

12.What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?

That is a bit like choosing your “favorite” among your children. Each has their own character and value and I find my “favorite” changing. Usually with the children, my “favorite” is the one I am talking to at the moment and I think the same is true for books. My special “favorite” seems to consistently be the one I am working on at the moment.

13.What is your writing schedule like?

The goal is 40 hours a week and I try to divide that time evenly between the business end of writing (marketing, networking, bookkeeping, travel, etc.) and actually putting creative words on paper. Sometimes I am over the forty and occasionally I’m below the mark, but if I don’t get in 40 hours, I feel as though I have cheated myself out of the wonderful world of possibilities that more effort might have opened up.

Tuesday, May 26, 2009

Hero Interview from Wildcard by Robin Shope


This week I'm hosting Robin Shope with her book, Wildcard and Elizabeth Baker with her book, Living with Eeyore. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 31st) evening.

Hero Interview:

Interview with the hero: Wildcard by Robin Shope

1.Tell us about you.

My name is Ian Serby. The most interesting thing about me is I do not exist. Living in this form defines who I am – or who I am not. Basically, I work undercover for myself. There are top level secrets of intelligence concerning things going on in the government that less than a handful of people know. It makes my existence both unique and dangerous.

2.What do you do for fun?

I enjoy playing with people’s minds. I quickly discover what they want out of life and what they value. Now I can control them and the situation.


3.What do you put off doing because you dread it?

I dread nothing.

4.What are you afraid of most in life?

There is one thing I am afraid of and that is Ivy finding out who I really am. She is the only one I really care about. Once she discovers my identity, she won’t have anything to do with me. Right now I know she is falling for me. For the first time in my life I really care about someone. I guess you could call her my Achilles’ heel. It’s not a good thing.

5.What do you want out of life?

I want our government to be honest in choosing its elected officials and then for those officials to live up to their word. It is my goal to make that happen.


6.What is the most important thing to you?

Ivy.

7.Do you read books?

If so, what is your favorite type of book? I like comic books about heroes. Things turn out the way they are supposed to be. We need more heroes. They are also a quick read. I can devour an entire comic book in no time at all.


8.If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I would not be vulnerable, not ever. Remember my Achilles heel. And yet, if I changed this, Ivy would leave.

9.Do you have a pet?

If so, what is it and why that pet? I travel so no time for a pet. But if I had one it would be a pound dog.



10.If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?

I would travel to the time our government was first formed and try to put into the constitution ways that it couldn’t be mess up by the following generations.

Monday, May 25, 2009

This week Robin Shope and Elizabeth Baker


Congratulations to Carly for winning Ramona Richards' book, The Taking of Carly Bradford and Linda for winning Jeanne Gowen Dennis' book, Running Barefoot on Holy Ground.

This week I'm hosting Robin Shope with her book, Wildcard and Elizabeth Baker with her book, Living with Eeyore. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 31st) evening.

Robin Shope's bio:

I have double major in Special Education and English with a minor in Theater. I hold five teaching certificates and have taught every grade from kindergarten to seniors in high school. Right now I am the Special Education Coordinator for Denton County Juvenile Justice Alternative Program. My work is with at risk teens from fifth grade through high school, who have been court ordered to attend our facility or has been expelled from school.

My husband and I have been married for thirty-two years and we have two grown children and our first grandchild was born April 1. The first two years of marriage, Rick and I traveled overseas as missionaries. Afterwards we served as pastors of a church in Illinois. Presently we live near Dallas, Texas.
(My husband still takes missions trips to India and Kenya.)

PUBLICATIONS:

To date, I have about two hundred articles in magazines such as: Guideposts, Live, Lookout, Mennonite, Christian Reader, Decision, Breakthrough and Christianity Today. Other short stories appear in the books: A Match Made in Heaven, Stories from the Heart, The Evolving Woman, and the New York Times bestseller, In The Arms of Angels by Joan Wester-Anderson. Ann Spangler also used one of my stories in her book, Help! I Can’t Stop Laughing. Another two-dozen stories have been published in the Chicken Soup books. One story, Mom’s Last Laugh, was re-enacted for a PAX-TV program: It’s a Miracle. I co-authored three thrillers; The Chase 2005, The Replacement 2006, The Candidate 2007. Wildcard 2009 is a stand alone mystery.

The light romantic series, The Turtle Creek Edition series is being completed for White Rose Press. The Christmas Edition and The Valentine Edition are released. 2010 The Easter Edition and The Harvest Edition.

The Christmas Edition is being produced by Steve Zambo of Salty Earth Pictures for a movie.


Elizabeth Baker's bio:

A widow since her mid-30's, Elizabeth has four grown children, fifteen grandchildren, and two great-grands. She is also an active professional with thirty-five years experience helping others apply biblical principles to real-life situations.

Licensed as a Professional Counselor with the State of Texas, Elizabeth holds a Master of Arts degree in counseling from Liberty University and a Doctor of Philosophy in Religion and Society from Oxford Graduate School. She has been writing professionally for more than thirty years and enjoys giving occasional seminars to both lay and professional audiences.

Visit her website at www.elizabethbakerbooks.com.

Living With Eeyore blurb:

Everyone loves Eeyore. Until you have to live with him! Your Eeyore may be a depressed mate, a melancholy teenager or a morose mother-in-law. How do you love someone who constantly sees the glass as half empty? Find out in this humorous, fast paced, practical book! Bible studies and discussion questions are included at the end of each chapter.

Saturday, May 23, 2009

Daniel's Den by Brandt Dodson


I don't get a chance to read as much as I want but occasionally I do and my most recent book I read was Daniel's Den by Brandt Dodson. He is coming to speak at a mini-conference for WIN-ACFW in Tulsa June 25th and 26th. Rene Gutteridge is the other speaker at this conference and both are excellent teachers. If you are interested in attending ($40 for ACFW members which includes lunch and $50 for others), go to WIN-ACFW's web site and check the conference out.

Daniel's Den (Brandt's most recent book):

I enjoyed this look into the world of finances. The main characters were people you want to root for and hope they triumph in the end. Daniel Borden is caught up in a situation that tears apart his comfortable world and forces him to run for his life. Laura Traynor discovers what happens when evil comes to her front door. These two pair up to solve a mystery that their lives hang on. Daniel’s Den is fast paced, well-researched with interesting characters that keep you turning the pages.

Thursday, May 21, 2009

Jeanne Gowen Dennis' interview


This week I'm hosting Ramona Richards with her book, The Taking of Carly Bradford and Jeanne Dennis with her book, Running Barefoot on Holy Ground. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 24th) evening.

Jeanne Gowen Dennis' interview:

1. What made you start writing?
I was trying to find something to do at home all day after becoming a stay-at-home mom. The adjustment from working fulltime surrounded by adults to spending all my time with an infant was difficult for me. My favorite part of my job as an extension agent in horticulture had been writing a weekly gardening column for two local newspapers, so I thought I would try freelance writing. I didn’t understand the importance of targeting my market, however, so I didn’t sell anything. About ten years later I attended my first Christian writers conference. The training I received there helped me start selling what I wrote.

2. How long have you been writing? When did you sell your first book?
I have been writing for the Christian market for about twenty years. My first book, Homeschooling High School: Planning Ahead for College Admission came out in 2000. I sold it to the seventh publisher that considered my proposal. It is in its second edition and still in print.

3. How do you handle rejections?
I used to be devastated by rejections. It was difficult not to take them personally. Eventually I decided I wasn’t going to let them get me down. I allowed myself 24 hours to grieve. After that, I had to forget about it and either send out the piece or proposal again, revise it, or work on something else. That was the agreement I made with myself. After a while, I didn’t even need the 24 hours. Rejections just became part of the job.

Projects for which I have a particular passion are different, though. I still sometimes need a day or so to be sad when they are rejected. That doesn’t mean I stop all my work. But I might give myself a break for an hour or two, watch a favorite movie, do something fun with a friend, or read a good book. Always when a rejection comes, I share my feelings and frustrations with the Lord in prayer. Those times always include a time of praise, usually in song. Praising Him in spite of my grief always improves my outlook and my mood. It puts everything back into perspective.

4. Why do you write?
When I first attempted writing, I did not know Jesus as my Lord and Savior. After I came to know Him, I wrote because I felt compelled to write. I wanted to express my love for God and make a difference in the world by helping others know Jesus, the only Truth that sets us free.
Now as a writer and speaker my focus is to encourage women and families to experience the joy of true faith. a life exciting and fulfilling beyond their wildest dreams, as they:

Grow in intimacy with the Creator,
Apply biblical truth to everyday life, and
Pass on the heritage of truth to others.


5. What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?
I honestly can’t imagine not writing. If I were not writing, I would still speak and sing. And I would probably pursue a master’s degree in theology, which I hope to do someday.

For fun I like to swim, read (of course), play piano, watch old or romantic movies (like Jane Austen movies), spend time with friends and family, play with the children in my life, cook, and do jigsaw puzzles.

6. What are you working on right now?
I’m in the early stages of both a contemporary novel and a nonfiction inspirational book. I just launched a monthly newsletter called “Faith Roots and Shoots” to help readers grow deeper in their faith and pass the heritage of faith to upcoming generations. People can sign up for it on my website, www.jeannedennis.com.

7. Do you put yourself into your books/characters?
I don’t think we as authors can help putting something of ourselves into what we write. If we write authentically—which we must if we are to write well—then our books and characters emanate from the deepest part of us. We each write from a lifetime of experiences, ideas, and beliefs. Although we put ourselves into the pages, it’s our common experiences as humans—our pain, joy, hope, compassion, faith, and love—that resonate with readers. We just need to make sure that we don’t make our work so personal that others can’t relate to it.

8. Tell us about the book you have out right now.
Running Barefoot on Holy Ground: Childlike Intimacy with God is the book of my heart. Most people's idea of God is far too small. If we truly realized who He is and who we are in relationship to Him, our greatest desire would be to love, serve, and worship Him with all our hearts and lives. Our joy would be so great that we couldn't contain it, and it would overflow to everyone around us. This type of relationship can happen only as we grow in our understanding of the awesome holiness of God and rediscover the joy of loving Him with the abandon and innocence of a child.

9. Do you have any advice for other writers?
Have a teachable spirit. Everyone can learn to write better, and everyone needs editors. Go to writers conferences, learn all you can, and then apply it. Don’t expect to get rich or even to be successful—at least as our culture defines it. As Christians, we are successful when we do God’s will. Seek first His kingdom and His righteousness. Your responsibilities are to hone your craft, write what God calls you to write, and send it where He tells you to send it, but the results are up to God.

10. How important is faith in your books?
My faith is my life, so it is integral to everything I write. Even if the faith element is not obvious, the foundation of biblical truth undergirds and sets the standard for everything I do.

11. What themes do you like to write about?
My passion is threefold: intimacy with God—which is essential for vibrant faith, understanding and applying Scripture to life, and passing on the true faith to upcoming generations.

12. What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?
Running Barefoot on Holy Ground: Childlike Intimacy with God is my favorite of the books I’ve published because it embodies my passion and also encourages readers to know God as He truly is—awesome, fearsome, and just, and at the same time loving, merciful, and kind.

13. What is your writing schedule like?
When I am self-disciplined, which is not all the time, I would get up at seven, exercise, read the Bible and pray and then start writing. My ideal would be to write from about 9 to 12 each day, break for lunch, and then write from about 1 to 5, leaving time to cook dinner and have it ready by 6:00. Sometimes I would also write in the evenings if none of my family members were home. I actually worked that way for several years (but I also worked all night, when necessary, to meet deadlines).

What usually happens now that I have moved to a new state with more family, home, and church obligations is that I write whenever something else doesn’t prevent it. I’m spending a lot more time now studying both the Bible and theological books so that I can teach other women and encourage them to explore God’s Word for themselves.

Where before my priority would have been to protect my writing time, the Lord has prompted me to put other people before my desires and plans. I’m trying to live out what I write—seeking greater intimacy with God, obeying Him enthusiastically and without hesitation, and passing on the heritage of true faith. Although on the surface my new “schedule” doesn’t seem efficient or organized, I believe it will strengthen my writing, because I will have a richer well of experience from which to draw.

Thank you for the opportunity to share my thoughts. May God bless you.

Tuesday, May 19, 2009

Ramona Richards' heroine's interview


This week I'm hosting Ramona Richards with her book, The Taking of Carly Bradford and Jeanne Dennis with her book, Running Barefoot on Holy Ground. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 24th) evening.

Interview with the heroine:

1. Dee Kelley, tell me the most interesting thing about you.

A few years ago, a drunk driver took my family away from me—my husband and my son. I didn’t know if I’d ever recover. God intervened and led me here. I think because of that loss, I’ve become a bit of a wildcat where the rights of families are concerned, especially moms. That’s why I was so determined to help Tyler find Carly. Now that my latest adventure is over, I plan to volunteer to help organization that work to find missing kids.

2. What do you do for fun?

I like simple things. Walks with Tyler, good food, long talks with my friends. And good books!

3. What do you put off doing because you dread it?

Housework. I despise a nasty bathroom, but I almost hate cleaning one more.

4. What are you afraid of most in life?

Losing someone I love. I think because I’ve experienced that loss, I know how crushing it can be.

5. What do you want out of life?

As I mentioned above, I cling to the basics in life. Tyler. A warm home. I’d like to write about missing kids and their families, raise the awareness of how many kids go missing and how stretched law enforcement is in trying to find them. We’re now at a point where there are more missing kids than there are people who can find them.

6. What is the most important thing to you?

Tyler. I hope we can have children. I’d adore having his child.

7. Do you read? If so, what is your favorite type of book to read?

Of course! I love romances, good mysteries. Anything I can disappear into for a few hours. My friend Maggie has me reading one of Dorothy Dunnett’s historicals, and Tyler keeps sneaking Westerns into the stack. I think he has a fantasy about being a Wild West sheriff!

8. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I should exercise more. I’m such a nester, that it’s easy for me to snuggle in on a rainy Saturday and do nothing but read. I have to make myself get up and write or get out with friends. Or, um, try to clean the house.

9. Do you have a pet? If so, what is it and why that pet?

I don’t, but Tyler has Patty, who is this sweet, unbelievably energetic Peekapoo. She wasn’t too sure about me hanging out with Tyler at first, but we’ve made friends now.

10. If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?

Ah, that is an incredibly loaded question for me. Obviously, I wish I could have known that drunk would run a red light. I would give anything to have my son back. God led me here to New Hampshire to heal and find Him again, and part of that healing is understanding how we must go on and NOT continue to look back. I have to focus forward, on God and what He’s led me to. And through.

Monday, May 18, 2009

This week Ramona Richards and Jeanne Gowen Dennis


Congratulations last week's winners are Edna with Amber Miller's Copper and Candles, Patty with Virginia Smith's Murder at Eagle Summit and Cindi with Amy Wallace's Enduring Justice.

This week I'm hosting Ramona Richards with her book, The Taking of Carly Bradford and Jeanne Dennis with her book, Running Barefoot on Holy Ground. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 24th) evening.

Ramona Richards' bio:

Ramona Richards, an award-winning editor and author, has worked on more than 350 publications. Her first three Steeple Hill novels A Murder Among Friends, The Face Of Deceit, and The Taking Of Carly Bradford received 4 ½ stars from Romantic Times magazine. Field Of Danger will be released in December.


Book Blurb of The Taking of Carly Bradford:

Three years ago, Dee Kelley lost her family. Three months ago, eight-year-old Carly Bradford disappeared. When Dee finds crucial evidence in a case rapidly growing cold, she becomes determined not to let another mother suffer the way she did. She will help police chief Tyler Madison find Carly, whether he wants her assistance or not. But Tyler isn’t the only one determined to keep Dee off the case. And evidence isn’t all that she’ll find waiting for her in the woods.


Jeanne Gowen Dennis' bio:

Jeanne Gowen Dennis is an award-winning author, CLASS-certified speaker, vocal soloist, and BreakPoint Centurion. Her inspirational book Running Barefoot on Holy Ground embodies her passion—helping others grow in intimacy with the Creator. Jeanne has published eleven books for adults and children and has written for Focus on the Family periodicals, Campus Life, CBN.com, DaySpring, and others. She has been interviewed on The Harvest Show and national and local radio. Speaking venues have included the National Church Library Association, Biola University, homeschool conferences, writers conferences, churches, schools, and bookstores. Jeanne has worked with adults and children of all ages for over 25 years and is a wife, mother, grandmother, and veteran homeschooler.

Book Blurb of Running Barefoot on Holy Ground:

Are you missing something in your faith walk? A life filled with Jesus is a life of joyous abandon when we give ourselves permission to experience it like a child, but this type of relationship can happen only as we grow in our understanding of the awesome holiness of God. Running Barefoot on Holy Ground can help you rediscover the joy of loving God with the abandon and innocence of a child.

Saturday, May 16, 2009

Enough is enough!


I know we need rain. It is important to life on Earth, but does it have to be all at once? We have had twenty some odd days with rain (in fact, that has set a record of the number of days straight with rain) and this gloomy weather is affecting me. I want to see the sun! It came out a little yesterday, but storms moved back in again last night and it is cloudy again today.

What do you do when the weather is like that? How do you lift your spirits when it hangs around and around? I'm thinking of painting a mural of a beautiful sunny day on a large shade, and then when it happens, drawing it down so when I'm writing I think it's a gorgeous day.

Friday, May 15, 2009

Amy Wallace's hero interview


This week I'm hosting Amber Miller with her book, Copper and Candles, Virginia Smith with her book, Murder at Eagle Summit, and Amy Wallace with her book, Enduring Justice. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 17th) evening.


Interview with the hero of Enduring Justice:

1. FBI Agent Michael Parker, tell me the most interesting thing about you.

I’m a military brat and have lived all over the world. I dreamed about being and CIA spook, but there’s a special lady in Alexandria who’s worth settling down for and staying right where I am.


2. What do you do for fun?

I love revving my Mustang and blasting alternative rock, now more alternative Christian rock. I’ve had my fill of the fast life and thanks to my mentor, Clint Rollins, I’m a believer who doesn’t have to numb out anymore. I now have real friends and Hanna to enjoy time with and take our dog, Champ, out for a run. We love hiking and spending time at the Rollins’s pool.


3. What do you put off doing because you dread it?

Hands down, that would be paperwork. My desk is a massive paper magnet and someplace I avoid if at all possible.

4. What are you afraid of most in life?

For most of my life, I’ve been afraid of never receiving my father’s approval.

5. What do you want out of life?

I want to be a catcher in the rye and save as many kids as I can. I also want to rebuild the relationship with my dad, no matter how difficult that road might be.


6. What is the most important thing to you?

That would be things for me. My relationship with Jesus, Hanna, and our dog, Champ, and making the world safer for kids and their families.


7. Do you read books? If so, what is your favorite type of book?

I love reading and try to squeeze it in any time I can. My favorite books are suspense and military thrillers. I especially enjoy it when authors get the details right and am happy to help them out any way I can, time permitting, of course.


8. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

My past. It’s a lie to think you can live hard and escape with no consequences. But I’m glad God forgives and loves me and makes something new out of me.


9. Do you have a pet? If so, what is it and why that pet?

Hanna bought me this amazing dog, Champ. He’s a yellow Lab and we love him. Champ is a guard dog, a running pal, and someone who makes me glad to come home at the end of a long day.


10. If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?

If I could take what I know now with me, I’d go back to right before all my cases started and stop people from ever hurting a child. Why? Children are precious and worth protecting.

Wednesday, May 13, 2009

Virgina Smith's heroine interview


This week I'm hosting Amber Miller with her book, Copper and Candles, Virginia Smith with her book, Murder at Eagle Summit, and Amy Wallace with her book, Enduring Justice. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 17th) evening.

Interview with the heroine of Murder at Eagle Summit:

1. Liz, tell me the most interesting thing about you.

Probably the most interesting thing about me is a secret I’ve kept from my friends for the past three years. I was engaged once, to my college sweetheart, but I broke off our engagement in a rather, uh, traumatic way. It’s something I’m not proud of, so when I moved from Utah to Kentucky three years ago, I didn’t tell anyone. But now my friends and I are going back to Utah to play at my cousin’s wedding, and my ex-fiancé is the best man. So I just know it’s all going to come out.

2. What do you do for fun?

I play the cello. Music has always been a creative outlet for me, and besides, I just enjoy it. So at night, after work, I play my cello instead of watching television. I used to snow ski a lot, but I haven’t done it since I left college three years ago. But since my cousin’s wedding is being held at a romantic ski resort in Park City, Utah, I’m sure I’ll get to hit the slopes again.

3. What do you put off doing because you dread it?

Seeing my grandma again. She was furious when I broke off my engagement to Tim, and every time I’ve talked to her she brings it up again. She’s got a pretty sarcastic tongue (some people say I inherited it from her), so I always end up feeling guilty. Seeing her again at my cousin’s wedding is not something I’m looking forward to.

4. What are you afraid of most in life?

Ive had a couple of encounters with some pretty frightening people recently, and now people with a personal agenda and no conscience scare me. They’re ruthless.

Another thing that scares me—though I don’t admit this, even to myself—is the suspicion that I made a terrible mistake when I broke up with Tim. What if he was my only chance at happiness? What if I never meet anyone else who can measure up to him? I don’t want to end up like my grandmother, alone in my old age, cranky and sarcastic.

5. What do you want out of life?

What does everyone want? I want happiness, and to be loved. I want all the conflict in my life to be resolved. Maybe this trip to Park City will finally help me put the past behind me, and I can move forward finding someone to love.

6. What is the most important thing to you?

I know it sounds strange, but family is important to me. They’re my heritage, where I came from. I love heirlooms, because they’re a tangible reminder of all those who came before me. Even sarcastic old Grandma!

7. Do you read? If so, what is your favorite type of book to read?

I do, but I’ve never been much of a fiction fan. I’m too practical. So I read anything I can get my hands on related to music, especially classical music. I love biographies, especially of the classic composers and artists. But truly, I don’t have time to read much. If you give me the choice between a book and a piece of music, I’ll be reaching for my cello within seconds.

8. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I with I had a stronger faith, like my friend Caitlin. When something scary happens, like when we thought our room may have been searched at Eagle Summit Lodge, her first reaction was to pray. She’s always that way. I wish my first thought was to turn to the Lord instead of plowing into a situation with stubborn determination that usually ends up getting me in trouble.

9. Do you have a pet? If so, what is it and why that pet?

Not now. When I was growing up we had a cat, though. I think I prefer cats to dogs because they’re so independent. Like me.

10. If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?

I’d go back to Vienna in 1673, when Johann Pachelbel was an organist at the famous Saint Stephen Cathedral

Tuesday, May 12, 2009

Amber Miller's hero interview


This week I'm hosting Amber Miller with her book, Copper and Candles, Virginia Smith with her book, Murder at Eagle Summit, and Amy Wallace with her book, Enduring Justice. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 17th) evening.

Interview with the hero of Copper and Candles:

1. Brandt, tell me the most interesting thing about you.

That would likely have to be the fact that I have willingly taken a job as a common refinery worker in order to learn the full scope of the jobs I now oversee as manager. I assumed a hidden persona and withheld my identity from everyone, including a certain young lady who works at the copper factory nearby. It came with its fair share of consequences, but if I had to repeat the experience, I don’t know that I would change anything.

2. What do you do for fun?

I don’t have a lot of time for fun, what with working at the copper refinery six days a week for 10-12 hours every day. Some of the other workers and I get into some mischief and find ways to relieve the tension of the workday, but I’m so exhausted by the time the day is done, I barely manage to eat before falling into bed each night. However, once a year, my family travels to Mackinac Island at the end of the summer. The time spent there allows me to get away from everything and focus on nothing at all.

3. What do you put off doing because you dread it?

Standing up to or confronting my father in matters of business when he has made such a success of what he’s attempted. Who am I to suggest that there might be a better way or a more viable solution? My father can be a rather formidable man to approach.

4. What are you afraid of most in life?

Afraid? I don’t know that I have any real fears like that. I must say that I don’t desire to have anyone believe me to be shallow or insincere in any way. But my biggest fear is that I might disappoint my father and have him view me in an unflattering light.

5. What do you want out of life?

I would love to succeed at the work I do and one day rise to management to follow in my father’s footsteps of starting small and making my own mark.

6. What is the most important thing to you?

Maintaining my integrity, no matter what the circumstances.

7. Do you read books? If so, what is your favorite type of book?

Oh yes. I am a voracious reader and find myself attracted to adventurous stories such as Robinson Crusoe or Journey to the Center of the Earth.

8. If you could change one thing about yourself, what would it be?

I wish I wouldn’t allow my anger to get the better of me when important and key issues are at stake. It almost cost me dearly.

9. Do you have a pet? If so, what is it and why that pet?

No. There really isn’t a place for a pet in our home, but I do love wild animals such as eagles, mountain lions, wolves and moose. There aren’t many here in the city, but when my family travels to the more uncivilized areas of the state or even up north to Canada, we discover a plethora of them.

10. If you could travel back in time, where would you go and why?

Travel to another time? Is that even possible? I have read about things like that, but only in fictionalized stories and exaggerated imaginations of the people who tell and write them. It does sound intriguing though, and if I could do it, I might choose a time before so much industry took over the expansive lands of the United States. The wild open frontier has an appeal all its own.

Monday, May 11, 2009

This week Amber Miller, Virginia Smith and Amy Wallace


Congratulations to Stormi for winning Roxanne Rustand's Deadly Competition and Donna for winning Teri Wilson's Love, Lilies and the Unbroken Straw.

This week I'm hosting Amber Miller with her book, Copper and Candles, Virginia Smith with her book, Murder at Eagle Summit, and Amy Wallace with her book, Enduring Justice. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 17th) evening.

Amber Miller's bio:

(Tiffany) Amber Stockton is an author and freelance web site designer who lives with her husband and fellow author, Stuart, in beautiful Colorado. They celebrated the birth of their daughter in April and have a vivacious puppy named Roxie, a Border Collie/Flat-Haired Retriever mix. Amber has sold six books so far to Barbour Publishing with more on the horizon. Other credits include writing articles for various publications, five short stories with Romancing the Christian Heart, and contributions to the books: 101 Ways to Romance Your Marriage and Grit for the Oyster. Read more about her at her web site: www.amberstockton.com.

Blurb of Copper and Candles:

Society teas and garden parties, shopping, gossip—Life as a young lady of means may be fun, but Felicity wants to do more. Unfortunately, she finds that her position and wealth can sometimes hinder her efforts to help those around her in need. Thus, when a charity case falls ill and cannot work, Felicity determines to go to work as a commoner in Detroit's dangerous factory district. Relationships become complicated, however, and she soon finds herself falling in love with a worker from the copper refinery next door. She knows her family would never accept him as a suitor, but what's a girl to do? What she doesn't know is that Brandt has his own secrets and hides his identity just as carefully as she. Brandt and Felicity soon discover that deception—no matter how noble its intent—demands a price that even they, with all their resources, may not be able to pay. Can they survive the storm when truth is revealed?


Virginia Smith's bio:

Virginia Smith left her job as a corporate director to become a full time writer and speaker with the release of her first novel Just As I Am. Since then she has contracted eleven novels and published numerous articles and short stories. She writes contemporary and romantic suspense novels for the Christian market, including Murder by Mushroom, Stuck in the Middle, and her newest releases Age before Beauty and Murder at Eagle Summit. In March of 2008 she was named "Writer of the Year" at Mount Hermon Christian Writers Conference. An energetic speaker, Virginia loves to exemplify God's truth by comparing real-life situations to well-known works of fiction, such as her popular talk, "Biblical Truths in Star Trek."


Book Blurb of Murder at Eagle Summit:

In Murder at Eagle Summit, The classical trio from A Taste of Murder head west, to play at a wedding in Park City, Utah. A romantic ski resort seems the perfect place for a wedding. Until a murder on the slopes turns everyone on Eagle Summit into suspects. Liz Carmichael, the bride's cousin, saw a shadowy figure on a chair lift in the middle of the night. But was it the victim or the killer? Liz goes to the police -- and finds herself giving her report to her ex-fiance, Deputy Tim Richards. After a three-year estrangement, she could finally make things right with Tim. Unless the killer finds her first.

Listen to the author read an excerpt, or watch the book video at www.virginiasmith.org/mystery.html




Amy Wallace's bio:

Amy Wallace is a wife, homeschool mom, author, speaker, president of a local writing group, co-leader of a young writer’s club, and avid chocoholic. She loves crafting high-action suspense that delves deep into heart issues. Amy is the author of the Defenders of Hope series: Ransomed Dreams, Healing Promises, and Enduring Justice, a contributing author of Chicken Soup for the Soul Healthy Living Series: Diabetes, and A Cup of Comfort for Expectant Moms. Visit Amy at www.amywallace.com and join the Dark Chocolate Suspense newsletter http://www.amywallace.com/Newsletter.html.


Enduring Justice
's blurb

Secrets Can’t Last Forever

A PAINFUL PAST

Hanna Kessler’s childhood secret has remained buried for over two decades. But when the dark shadows of her past threaten to destroy those she loves, Hanna must face the summer that changed her life and the man who still haunts her memories.

A RACIALLY-MOTIVATED KILLER

As a Crimes Against Children FBI Agent, Michael Parker knows what it means to get knocked down. Difficult cases and broken relationships have plagued his entire year. But when the system fails and a white supremacist is set free, Michael’s drive for retribution eclipses all else.

A LIFE-ALTERING CHOICE

A racist's well-planned assault forces Hanna and Michael to decide between executing vengeance and pursuing justice. The dividing line is the choice to heal. But when the attack turns personal, is justice enough?


http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1601420145 Amazon link for Enduring Justice
http://www.amywallace.com/ej_chapter.html Read the first two chapters of Enduring Justice
http://www.amywallace.com/Newsletter.html Dark Chocolate Suspense Newsletter

Saturday, May 09, 2009

Deadlines! Eek!


This past month I've had a lot of deadlines--some I knew about for months and a few others that popped up. I felt overwhelmed and swamped. I know that is redundant, but you get the picture--busy, busy. As I was thinking about those deadlines, I came to hate the word, deadline. It isn't a word that allows you to think peaceful thoughts. Dead--nothing peaceful about that. I think or corpses--remember I'm a romantic suspense writer. Even line is so definite--linear, no give or take there.

So my question to you is what would be a better word for a deadline. How about Next Day Celebration? Or Goal Achieving Line--oh, wait, I've got that word line again. Now you see why I need your help. What's a better term for what we refer to as the dreaded deadline? Tell you a secret. I never did like them in school either.

Thursday, May 07, 2009

Teri Wilson's interview


This week I'm hosting Roxanne Rustand with her book, Deadly Competition and Teri Wilson with her book, Love, Lilies and the Unbroken Straw. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 10th) evening.

Teri Wilson's interview:

1. What made you start writing?

The first thing I ever wrote was my Bible Study workbook (All Creatures of Our God and King: What God’s Word Says About Animals – Eden Publications LLC, 2006). And that really began as a personal project. I was leading a Bible Study at my church and most of the participants were animal lovers, like myself. I was looking for new materials for our group and thought it would be great to find a Bible Study about animals in the Bible. But, after looking everywhere, I couldn’t find one. Figuring there just wasn’t enough about animals in the Bible to warrant an entire study, I began doing my own research. I was astounded at the huge amount of verses dealing with animals. I remember saying to my son one night, “Hey, did you know one of the Ten Commandments even prohibits animals from doing work on the Sabbath? There’s so much about animals in here someone really should write a study.” My son said, “Why don’t you do it, Mom?” So I did.

2. How long have you been writing? When did you sell your first book?

I started writing in 2004. Including research time, it took about a year to write the Bible study. I sold it to the first publisher I approached – a small press dealing specifically with Christian books for animal lovers. Fiction writing was a completely different story! I took a year to write my first novel and it was promptly rejected by everyone who laid eyes on it. And there’s a good reason for that – there are numerous problems with it. But it was a huge learning experience and time well-spent. My next effort was far better.

3. How do you handle rejections?

Eat a pint of cookies & cream ice cream and move on.

Seriously, I try to look at each rejection as a good thing. If you are getting rejections, it means you are writing. You are getting words on the page and books finished. And with each page, you are learning more and getting closer to your goals.

4. Why do you write?

I think I write because I love books so much. Growing up as an only child, I was a voracious reader. (And still am.) I know how much books can mean to people. I love how God used my love of books to bless me with the gift of writing my own.

5. What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?

Well, I’m a big dog lover and I show my dog in obedience and conformation dog shows. So, that’s my other passion.

6. What are you working on right now?

Right now I’m working on a novella for White Rose Publishing called Once Upon a Collar. It’s an inspirational, modern twist on the traditional fairy tale. This is actually a really exciting and unusual project. Once Upon a Collar will be released by the publisher one chapter at a time, for free, only to members of the White Rose Publishing Yahoo Group. The first installment will be available late summer/early fall. Anyone is welcome to join the Yahoo group. The more the merrier! To join, visit http://groups.yahoo.com/group/WhiteRosePublishing/

7. Do you put yourself into your books/characters?

Oh, yes. Usually, my heroines all love dogs. I recently heard from a cat lover who wanted me to write something with a cat character. So, I wrote a short story called A Perfect Fit, which will also be released as a free read by White Rose Publishing. And I’ve also done some work on a novel with a heroine who hates dogs and ends up working at an animal shelter. That’s been great fun.

8. Tell us about the book you have out right now.

My latest book is Love, Lilies & the Unbroken Straw from The Wild Rose Press. It is Book Two in my Hoofbeats & Heartstrings series of romance novels that celebrate love, miracles and the beauty of horses. The setting for the Hoofbeats & Heartstrings books is a horse rescue farm just outside of San Antonio, Texas. A portion of the proceeds go directly to help horses in need at Saddlebred Rescue. Both of the Hoofbeats & Heartstrings books are available on Amazon.com.

Here is a little glimpse of Love, Lilies & the Unbroken Straw:

Christabel Wilde’s life has just turned upside-down. With little more than the clothes on her back and her newly rescued Chihuahua tucked under her arm, she makes a pledge to start over and applies for a job as a groom at a horse rescue farm. Nevermind that she’s never been up close to a horse before, she has a bigger secret to hide. A mysterious gift her new neighbor, Dr. Declan Armstrong, is determined to uncover. When the irresistible veterinarian volunteers to give her riding lessons, Christabel knows it could be the end of her secret. With the Easter holiday approaching, she tries to remember that sometimes what looks like the end is really a new beginning.

9. Do you have any advice for other writers?

Write. Just get the words down. My other advice would be to read, especially in your genre. Without a doubt, reading has made me into the writer I am today.

10. How important is faith in your books?

Faith is very important in my books. The Hoofbeats & Heartstrings series is not inspirational, but there are still threads of faith and Christianity there. My upcoming romance, Cup of Joe, is my first fully inspirational novel and I couldn’t be more excited about it. I like to have strong spiritual themes in my inspirational fiction – not just mention church here and there. I like to show characters who really incorporate their faith in all aspects of their lives.

11. What themes do you like to write about?

Well, it’s pretty obvious I enjoy writing about animals. I also like exploring themes of rejection and rescue. And I have a special fondness for fairy tales, so I like paying tribute to fairy tale themes in my writing.

12. What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?

Without a doubt, Cup of Joe is my favorite book I’ve written. It will be released from White Rose Publishing later this year. I don’t have a specific release date yet. It is about a woman coping with the death of her grandfather, and how she resists the cups of comfort offered by the shy, but handsome, owner of the neighborhood coffee shop. I came up with the idea for this book shortly after my Grandpa passed away. After I plotted it out, I didn’t even start writing it for a year because I wanted it to be as perfect as possible. I love the way it turned out. It reminds me of my Grandpa and I also have a sentimental attachment to it because it’s my first inspirational romance.

13. What is your writing schedule like?

I write anywhere and everywhere I can. I have an Alpha-smart word processor keyboard I take with me just about everywhere I go. I like it because it’s lightweight, runs on regular batteries that never seem to run down and I can’t surf the internet on it and get distracted! I try to write 1,000 words a day. Sometimes life gets in the way, though. I do the best I can.

Tuesday, May 05, 2009

Roxanne Rustand's interview


This week I'm hosting Roxanne Rustand with her book, Deadly Competition and Teri Wilson with her book, Love, Lilies and the Unbroken Straw. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 10th) evening.

Roxanne Rustand's interview:

1. What made you start writing?
After college, I read mostly nonfiction for years--I love biographies and books on history. One day, my friend Judy gave me a novel by her favorite author and dared me to put it down. I was immediately hooked, bought everything that author had written, and was hungry for more. When this dear friend later asked if I'd like to write articles for her magazine and offered me a computer, I found out what a joy it was to use a word processing program! I just kept at it, writing articles and eventually toying with a story...wishing I could create the kind of magic I read on the pages of my favorite novels. I never dreamed that I could ever actually sell a book! I owe Judy a great deal, for guiding me towards a part of my life that I now enjoy so much.


2. How long have you been writing? When did you sell your first book?
I've been writing since 1993, and sold my first book in 1998. I've sold twenty-three books, though the first amateur effort is exactly where it should stay--in the deep, dark recesses of my closet!

3. How do you handle rejections?
I remember thinking that the validation of making a first sale meant everything--that afterwards, it would be much easier to sell again. But that isn't necessarily the case. Readers change, editors change, publishers evolve. After selling fifteen books, I received a rejection on a trilogy. I re-wrote it, and was rejected again. For a good six months, I struggled to find my confidence, and dithered about what direction to take. With the support and advice of a dear friend, I ultimately realized that this was an opportunity for growth, not a dead end. Since then, I've heard stories about the incredible determination of some aspiring authors who have overcome many, many rejections. Who persevered and ultimately, succeeded. I guess the saying I used to have above my computer is true: God doesn't give the desire without also giving the ability. We just have to keep the faith, hold on to our dreams, and never let go!

4. Why do you write?
If I suddenly had a million dollars and the freedom to do anything--or nothing--I would still write. There's a sense of satisfaction in creating a world, creating the people who inhabit it--and seeing that world "come alive" on the pages of a book.

5. What would you be doing with your free time if you weren’t writing?
Spending time with my family has always been at the top of my list, though I also love cooking, spending time with our horses, dogs and cats, travel, and photography.

6. What are you working on right now?
I have a book due in a little over a week, so I'm a bit nervous about that. It's been one of my toughest deadlines--four months for the book, and during that time I have had carpal tunnel surgery, rotator cuff surgery, bronchitis, and pneumonia...and we had various construction folks working on remodeling projects in our house. Whew! Now, I'm back to great health, and am typing like mad!

7. Do you put yourself into your books/characters?
I don't think an author can help it. An author's "voice" comes from who he or she is--life experiences, beliefs, morals, every aspect of the author's background. Beyond that, one thing I intentionally do is to frequently incorporate our menagerie. Horse, dogs, cats, cockatiels--even our son's pet albino corn snake, Ssssid, who appeared in my very first book. We've had just about every kind of pet in our household...though I had to "borrow" a few, too...such as Dolly the llama, who had a big role in A Montana Family.

8. Tell us about the book you have out right now.
Deadly Competition is the fifth book in the six-author "Without a Trace" series. In this story, my heroine is on the run and ends up in the small town where all of the stories are set. She is hired by the hero to help take care of his young niece...in a town where danger is already lurking, and where murders have taken place in recent months. The entire series will wrap up with the final book by Terri Reed, in June. This romantic suspense series provided an opportunity to work with the five other authors, who are all wonderful people and excellent writers!

9. Do you have any advice for other writers?
Definitely. Finish your book! Make it to "The End", polish it, and submit it. Then start another...finish it, and start over. Too many people just fiddle with the first few chapters for years, or fail to actually submit their work.

Don't give up on your dreams--because you never know if your first sale will be just around the next corner. Whether you've had one rejection or ten, keep writing. Keep working at developing your craft, and be open to advice.

10. How important is faith in your books?
I write for Love Inspired Romantic Suspense, so faith is a definite element in each book I write for them. You'll see a broad spectrum of how intense that element is, if you read a variety of authors for the line. Something I hadn’t realized, though, was something that a friend pointed out to me not long ago: even when I was writing steadily for just Harlequin Superromance, my characters were people of faith, and there were light inspirational elements in many of those books, too.

I have an Everlasting coming out in August (Save the Last Dance, which will be distributed with the Superromances) which also involves a heroine of faith, who counts on her heavenly father when disaster strikes. I guess it all comes back to question #7, above--who an author is, and what she believes, is part of her voice.

11. What themes do you like to write about?
I have always loved to incorporate intergenerational relationships in my books--it's a universal theme that runs through our real lives, whether we are dealing with children, older parents, or are caught between both. Themes involving the importance of communication, caring, forgiveness and understanding. The richness of life when we can overcome interpersonal conflicts, as well as those within us...and the importance of faith for achieving a full and abundant life.

12. What is your favorite book you’ve written and why?
I loved writing the Snow Canyon Ranch series (Hard Evidence, Vendetta, Wildfire) for Love Inspired Suspense, because it involved one of my favorite settings (the Rocky Mountains), I was able to include some of my favorite themes, and it was also my first chance to write for an inspirational line. Being able to more fully incorporate a faith element in these stories gave me such joy, and a sense of freedom!

13. What is your writing schedule like?
I work part-time as a dietitian in a residential psychiatric facility. On my days off during the week, I try to focus on my writing.

Monday, May 04, 2009

This week Roxanne Rustand and Teri Wilson


Congratulations to Traveler who won Donald James Parker's The Bulldog Compact.

This week I'm hosting Roxanne Rustand with her book, Deadly Competition and Teri Wilson with her book, Love, Lilies and the Unbroken Straw. If you want to enter the drawing for the book, please leave a comment on one of the post during the week with your email address. I will not enter you without an email address (my way to contact you if you win). If you don't want to leave an email address, another way you can enter is to email me at margaretdaley@gmail.com. The drawings end Sunday (May 10th) evening.

Roxanne Rustand's bio:

Roxanne lives in the country with her family, and a menagerie of pets that frequently find their way into her books. If not working at her day job as a registered dietitian, writing at home in her jammies, or spending time with her family, you'll find her riding one of the family's horses, playing with her camera, or hiding with her nose in a book.

She is the author of twenty-three romantic suspense and heart-warming relationship novels. Her first manuscript won the Romance Writers of America Golden Heart, and her second was a Golden Heart finalist. More recently, one of her books won RT Bookclub Magazine's award for Best Superromance of 2006, and she was nominated for RT's Career Achievement Award in 2005.

She loves to hear from readers, and can be reached through www.roxannerustand.com or www.shoutlife.com/roxannerustand.

Deadly Competition's blurb:

The single mother hasn't been found. And all her daughter, Sarah, has is her uncle. Clueless at parenting, Clint Herald seeks a loving, responsible nanny. What he finds instead is a stranger as mysterious as his sister's disappearance. Mandy Erick is secretive and seems scared, yet she's so good with Sarah that Clint can't help but trust her. In fact, he even enters Mandy in the town's Mother of the Year contest. But attention is the last thing Mandy wants. Her time in the public eye may prove just as dangerous as she fears.


Teri Wilson's bio:

Romancing the pet-lover's soul

Teri's son once wrote in a third-grade paper, "My Mom loves dogs and Jesus." He may have gotten the order reversed, but the sentiment was right on target. Her romance stories are often filled with happy endings, splashes of humor and a loveable critter or two. After all, Cinderella never would have lived happily ever after without a little help from her animal friends!

Teri is thrilled to be the grand prize winner of the 2009 San Antonio Romance Authors Merritt Contest for her inspirational romance Rodeo Redemption. Both Rodeo Redemption and her other inspirational romance, Cup of Joe, are finalists in the Contemporary Romance category. Teri recently signed a contract for Cup of Joe with White Rose Publishing, so be on the lookout for Cup of Joe later this year! Rodeo Redemption is still in progress.

Teri is also the winner of the 2008 Pet Sitters International Humor Writing Award, the 2008 Spaniel Journal Writing Contest, the 2006 Westminster Kennel Club Angel on a Leash Writing Award and the 3rd place winner of the 21st Annual American Kennel Club Short Fiction Contest. She lives in San Antonio, Texas, with her husband, son and three delightful dogs. She loves to hear from readers and can be reached through her website at www.teriwilson.net or via email at puppylove@satx.rr.com.

Love, Lilies & the Unbroken Straw's blurb:

Christabel Wilde’s life has just turned upside-down. With little more than the clothes on her back and her newly rescued Chihuahua tucked under her arm, she makes a pledge to start over and applies for a job as a groom at a horse rescue farm. Nevermind that she’s never been up close to a horse before, she has a bigger secret to hide. A mysterious gift her new neighbor, Dr. Declan Armstrong, is determined to uncover. When the irresistible veterinarian volunteers to give her riding lessons, Christabel knows it could be the end of her secret. With the Easter holiday approaching, she tries to remember that sometimes what looks like the end is really a new beginning.

Buy link for Love, Lilies & the Unbroken Straw: http://www.amazon.com/Love-Lilies-Unbroken-Straw-Wilson/dp/1601543751/ref=sr_1_3?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1239634966&sr=1-3

Friday, May 01, 2009

May releases

Happy May! Check out all these new releases!
1. A Bride of Honor byRuth Axtell Morren from Steeple Hill Love Inspired Historical. An impoverished preacher from the working class falls in love with a young lady of the London ton and risks all including his reputation to save her honor.

2. A Prairie Romance Collection, by Lynn A. Coleman, Mary Davis, Lena Nelson Dooley, Susan K. Downs, Birdie L. Etchison, Linda Ford, Linda Goodnight, JoAnne A. Grote, Cathy Marie Hake, Judith McCoy Miller, Kathleen Paul, Janet Spaeth
from Barbour Publishing. Relive History On The American Great Plains.

3. Beyond Corista, Shadowside Series - Book 3 by Robert Elmer from Zondervan. In the last book of the trilogy, Oriannon and Sola set out to take the word of Jesmet beyond their planet, but are captured by traders, who hold the girl as a pawn in an interplanetary struggle.

4. Bittersweet Memories by Cecelia Dowdy from Barbour Heartsong Presents. Karen's fiancé has disappeared after embezzling money from their large mega-church; can she learn to love again?

5. Enduring Love, Sydney Cove Series, Book Three by Bonnie Leon from Revell. John and Hannah have lived by faith. When all seems lost they must continue to believe in a God who can do all things.

6. Lethal Lasagna, by Rhonda Gibson from White Rose Publishing. Lethal Lasagna is a cozy romantic mystery.

7.Love Finds You in Liberty, Indiana, by Melanie Dobson from Sommerside Press. A Quaker woman risks everything to operate a station on the Underground Railroad in 1850.

8. Rose House, by Tina Ann Forkner from Waterbrook Press. vivid story of a private grief, a secret painting, and one woman's search for hope.

9. So Not Happening, A Charmed Life, book one by Jenny B. Jones from Thomas Nelson. Isabella Kirkwood had it all: popularity at a prestigious private school in Manhattan, the latest fashions, and a life of privilege and luxury. What's a girl to do when God gives you the total smackdown?

10. The Lyons Den , 3rd Book in The Shelton Heights Series by Kendra Norman-Bellamy from Urban Books. With his and his family's life placed in danger by a stalker who only identifies himself as "Dr. A.H. Satan," Stuart Lyons has to somehow maintain his faith in God.

11. Tour de Force, by Beth White from Zondervan. Gilly Kincade, rising star in a premier NYC ballet company, and Birmingham artistic director Jacob Ferrar wrestle with ordering the priorities of building a relationship, pursuing artistic dreams, and serving God.

12. Trail to Justice, by Susan Page Davis from Heartsong Presents. A police dispatcher and a veterinarian compete in a 100-mile horse race for fun, but find intrigue and romance, along with an injured champion and a wrecked airplane.

13. What the Bayou Saw by Patti Lacy from Kregel Publishing. Sally Stevens, Mary's Southern friend in an Irishwoman's Tale, grapples with her own memories, buried beneath the murky waters of a Louisiana bayou.

14. Wild Prairie Roses, by Lena Nelson Dooley and Laurie Alice Eakes and Lisa Harris from Barbour Publishing. Elusive dreams unite three couples.

15. Who Made you a Princess, All About Us #4 by Shelley Adina from Hatchette Faithwords. Will Shani Hanna choose the boy next door or a real-life handsome prince?

Happy reading ~