1–What is the title of your latest release? WE LOVE THE NIGHTLIFE 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? London disco vampires! (But the core of the story is about a friendship between two women that goes completely off the rails…they just happen to be vampires that open a nightclub together.) 3–How did you decide where your book was going to take place? I’ve spent a lot of extended time in London (my husband is half-English) and it’s my favorite city in the world. Plus, I thought it would add more color and depth to the historical and vampirical elements of the story. 4–Would you hang out with your protagonist in real life? Yes. I love party girls. 5–What are three words that describe your protagonist? Amber Wells is…fun-loving, tempestuous and sly. 6–What’s something you learned while writing this book? Knowing your characters backward and forward is essential for figuring out big plot problems. Time crafting their personalities and back stories and hopes and dreams is never wasted. It always comes back around in some way when drafting. 7–Do you edit as you draft or wait until you are totally done? I try not to edit as I draft,…
1–What is the title of your latest release? STONE COLD FOX 2–What’s the “elevator pitch” for your new book? Stone Cold Fox is about Bea, a hot girl con artist who aims to marry into the 1 percent to bury her dark past for good, but it won’t be so easy to infiltrate a family this rich, especially when the best friend of her target husband wants nothing more than to put Bea in her place at any cost. 3–How did you decide where your book was going to take place? Old money is in New York so that’s where Bea had to be. As for the other cities briefly featured in Bea’s past, I chose wealthy neighborhoods in major metropolitan areas. 4–Would you hang out with your protagonist in real life? One hundred percent. An emphatic yes. 5–What are three words that describe your protagonist? Ambitious. Vicious. Hilarious. 6–What’s something you learned while writing this book? That mommy issues may be even more dire than those of the daddy variety. 7–Do you edit as you draft or wait until you are totally done? I’ll do casual edits that I catch in the moment, but I don’t do any major…

