Fresh FIction Box Not To Miss
Ashley Clark | Writing Compelling Characters in Short Story
Author Guest / January 22, 2016

When I got the contract for my first short story publication with Guideposts, I was thrilled. And then it hit me. I had an M.A. in creative writing, years of teaching experience, and several yet-to-be-published novels under my belt… and no idea what I was doing. So I started with what I knew. The characters. In “The Christmas Thief,” I wanted to show that people are not always who they seem, and everyone has a story. That sounds trite, I know. But as storytellers, I truly believe it’s our job to challenge to craft characters that surprise the reader, and perhaps more importantly, characters that challenge the reader. This story highlights a homeless man who was once materially successful, and the pastor of a fancy church who does not react to the homeless man quite as you’d expect. I tried to dig deep into the question of what it means to live on both sides of the church walls. As I found my main character searching for hope, I realized the story was coming alive because the character had. So here’s what I learned! Give your character a compelling setting from which to thrive. I write southern fiction, usually southern…

MK Schiller | Life Lessons
Author Guest / January 22, 2016

My father taught me many valuable lessons. As an immigrant, he came to this country with an abundance of hope and very little capital. Yet, he was able to achieve great things. He once told me when I chose to read a book, I was choosing an experience instead of merely passing the time. He went on to say that stories broadened our horizons, fueled feelings of compassion for others, and in general made us better people. He said there was some kind of magic in books that couldn’t compare to anything else. I remember crying after I read THE GIVING TREE by Shel Silverstein as a child. I cried my eyes out for a freaking tree! Now, if that isn’t powerful magic, I don’t know what is. I believe the deceased are never really gone. Not if they loved someone. Then they left a mark that will carry forward. As long as we have stories to share, their memory lives. So, I share with you these things my father taught me, knowing his story lives on. He encouraged a passion for reading. With each book, I got lost in amazing worlds, rich with quirky characters and unique settings. This…

Sara Walter Ellwood | Strong Heroines
Author Guest / January 22, 2016

Anyone who knows me, knows I’m a HUGE Star Wars geek. Several of my favorite heroines come from this series of movies and the old Expanded Universe books and comics: Rey (from the new movie), Princess Leia, Mara Jade Skywalker (who first appeared in the Timothy Zahn books in the 1990s), Jaina Solo (who also is a Timothy Zahn contribution to the series), and many others. I even think the heroine from the prequel series, Padme Amidala (until her character is murdered by her creator) is a strong woman. See, I’m a geek, but I digress. The universal thing these women have in common is their ability to overcome hardship and not just survive, but become even stronger. They are leaders, even if they don’t know it. Some of my favorite heroines from books are Claire Fraser from Diana Gabaldon’s Outlander series, Scarlett O’Hara from GONE WITH THE WIND by Margaret Mitchell, Cat Crawford who is the half-vampire spitfire from Jeaniene Frost’s Night Huntress series. I could go on, but these heroines will do. None of these woman wanted to do anything heroic. They were all living their lives when life turned inside out and upside down. When Claire is…

A Conversation with Jan Drexler
Author Guest , Interviews / January 22, 2016

Jan Drexler is the descendant of Anabaptists who settled in Pennsylvania in the 1700s and then migrated west. She’s started a new series, Journey to Pleasant Prairie, that is based in part on her own family’s history in migrating west. Join us in a conversation with Jan as she talks about the series and the first book, HANNAH’S CHOICE, which is out now. Your ancestors were Amish, Mennonite, and Brethren. Did this ever cause controversy within your family? I’m sure the controversy was there, but it was before my time. Most of my Amish ancestors moved to the more liberal Amish Mennonite church during the Great Schism in the Amish church in the late 1800’s, and from there to Mennonite and German Baptist Brethren churches. One of the reasons I started writing was to explore that time of division. As I study my family’s genealogy, it is apparent that the schism didn’t only cause churches to split, but divided families. Parents and children, brothers and sisters all found themselves on one side of the divide or the other. My stories came about as I tried to explore how that would affect a family and the close relationships within the community….

Lisa Richardson | What the Editor Saw
Author Guest / January 22, 2016

I’d venture to guess that every avid reader, and most average readers have come across an error or six in the books you’ve read over the years. Some errors you probably forgave for the sake of the narrative, but others may have been the kind of howlers that ruined the whole story for you. For the author the whole process of being edited can be disconcerting. My most recent novel, THE PEACOCK THRONE, is a Regency adventure story with spies, and treasure, and high intrigue. It is just releasing from Lion Fiction a new-to-me publisher based in England. The editing process was even more rigorous than I am used to. Here are some of the things the editors questioned: Chocolate. Specifically, did they have chocolate candies in England at the time, or simply drinking chocolate? Answer: Contrary to conventional wisdom among regency fans, chocolate candies were available. In Savoring the Past: The French Kitchen and Table from 1300 to 1789, culinary historian Barbara Ketcham Wheaton cites a 1750 cookbook that specialized in desserts: “There are also some chocolate candies: the still familiar diablotins — flat disks of bitter chocolate, thickly sprinkled with nonpareils, chocolate “olives” (which we call chocolate truffles),…

Downton Revisited
Author Guest , History / January 21, 2016

Are you as distressed as I am that Downton Abbey will soon be ending FOR GOOD? (sob) Given the world-wide popularity of the show, there are surprisingly few books set in the Edwardian era that incorporate the upstairs-downstairs, love-interest and drama that make the show so engaging (to say nothing of the yummy fashions.) But, in an attempt to offer solace, I’ve gathered a few volumes which segue in and beyond the period of Downton, in which one may take refuge after the glorious series images fade—ending with a tantalizing treat coming soon from series creator Julian Fellowes that you won’t want to miss! THE MEMORY OF LOST SENSES Buy THE MEMORY OF LOST SENSES: Amazon.com | Kindle| BN.com| iTunes/iBooks | Kobo | Google Play | Powell’s Books | Books-A-Million | Indiebound | Amazon CA | Amazon UK | Amazon DE | Amazon FR We’ll begin with a book that incorporates some “Country House Mystery” elements, Judith Kinghorn’s THE MEMORY OF LOST SENSES. When a mysterious countess moves into a large country house outside her English village in the summer of 1911, Cecily Chadwick is thrilled and tantalized. Soon, stories begin to circulate about the countess’s wealth, husbands, lovers, and…

Love to read ROMANCE? Want FREE(ISH)** BOOKS?
News / January 21, 2016

If you said yes to both questions, please consider signing up to judge The Carolyn Readers Choice Award contest. The North Texas chapter of Romance Writers of America is looking for approximately 250-300 romance readers to help choose winners in five romance sub-categories. To be eligible, you must be 18 years of age or older and not affiliated with the publishing industry in any way, to include being an aspiring author. Judging involves reading up to five books in their entirety and filling out an online score sheet. Contest closes for entries on February 14, 2016 and judging panels will be emailed out sometime starting February 21st. Judging deadline is April 14th. For more information and to sign up, visit the.carolyn.judge.info. If you have any further questions, contact Clover Autrey and/or Jen FitzGerald, the contest coordinators at [email protected]. Please feel free to forward the opportunity to any family or friends you think might be interested.

Fresh Pick | WRITTEN IN FIRE by Marcus Sakey
Fresh Pick / January 21, 2016

Fresh Pick for Thursday, January 21st, 2016 is WRITTEN IN FIRE by Marcus Sakey #SupernaturalThursday – end to a great trilogy About WRITTEN IN FIRE The explosive conclusion to the bestselling Brilliance Trilogy For thirty years humanity struggled to cope with the brilliants, the 1 percent of people born with remarkable gifts. For thirty years we tried to avoid a devastating civil war. We failed. The White House is a smoking ruin. Madison Square Garden is an internment camp. In Wyoming, an armed militia of thousands marches toward a final, apocalyptic battle. Nick Cooper has spent his life fighting for his children and his country. Now, as the world staggers on the edge of ruin, he must risk everything he loves to face his oldest enemy—a brilliant terrorist so driven by his ideals that he will sacrifice humanity’s future to achieve them. From “one of our best storytellers” (Michael Connelly) comes the blistering conclusion to the acclaimed series that is a “forget-to-pick-up-milk, forget-to-water-the-plants, forget-to-eat total immersion experience” (Gillian Flynn). Buy WRITTEN IN FIRE: Amazon.com | Kindle|BN.com | Kobo | Powell’s Books | Books-A-Million | Indiebound | Amazon CA | Amazon UK | Amazon DE | Amazon FR About Marcus Sakey…

Paige Shelton | The Printing Press and Where Books Come From
Author Guest / January 21, 2016

In the first book of my new Dangerous Type mystery series you’ll meet Clare Henry and her grandfather, Chester. Chester opened his shop, The Rescued Word, back in the 1950s. Along with repairing typewriters, Chester had a vision: he wanted to save all kinds of words, including those in books. He decided to learn how to repair books, bring them back to their original glory. This included mastering how to reprint badly damaged and unsalvageable pages. Back in the 1950s there were no personal computers that might help with this task. Besides, it would have gone against Chester’s ways to use something like a computer to repair an old book. He wanted his own printing press, and he wanted one of the best. Of course, owning an original Gutenberg press would have been out of reach, so he decided to build his own – a perfect Gutenberg replica. A quick look back in time – clay tablets were probably the first books. From there, books took on many different forms with their pages being made of things like papyrus, bone, wood, silk, and parchment. Paper was invented in China around the first century A.D. For a time during the dark…

Clare James | How I Got My Sexy Back
Author Guest / January 20, 2016

A few years ago, I was in a slump. My writing career was starting to take off but my personal life was anything but exciting. I was working at home, most often in my pjs, writing around the clock, and leaving any remaining time I had left in the day for my husband and son—and if you’re a parent, you’ll realize it was my son who got the majority of that time. I was tired, uninspired, unhealthy, and it was beginning to show. But then something happened … a character named Stevie Sinclair started to speak to me! She also had lost her sexy, lost a bit of herself, and she was desperate to get it back. And so began our journey to figure this thing out together. The result? A book called DIRTY LITTLE LIES and a new me—a healthier, happier, more positive and productive me. In my steamy little novel, Stevie goes on a hot and hilarious adventure that helps her rediscover herself, and I tell you, readers responded. And this week, I’m so happy to bring Gabe Shannon, Stevie’s dreamy hero, to the forefront of the series with a new novella about his journey titled DIRTY. I…