The Darling, Jenny Hilborne, has challenged me. Not only me; others have been invited to participate in her little blog experiment. She targeted me for the pleasure of causing me torment. She has a game that draws out of us seven lines of text in our current work in progress.
Though her invitation came through the equally evil Maria Savva, who was first pestered thus by Elpi Pamiadaki, Jenny and Maria both know well...
I am not currently writing a book.
There are not enough lines of text in a new project to adhere to the strictures of her challenge.
I was miffed.
There can be only one way to participate. I must create those lines in her honor. I will do so, only after thoroughly messing with the game in my own way. That seems only fair.
Here are the guidelines she knew I could scarcely follow.....
Go to page 7 or 77 in your current manuscript (fiction or non-fiction)
Go to line 7
Post on your blog the next 7 lines, or sentences, as they are - no cheating
Tag 7 other authors to do the same
Well, not even easily done if you have the story in text to begin with...
Now my twist. Below are the requested lines from each of my five novels. I've attached images, because I can, and to be the bendy-fellow Jenny expects me to be. However. HOWEVER!
Pause not there—I will rise to the challenge a bit further....
From Harmony's Passing
From Caraliza
From Breathing into Stone
From Shared
From When America Slew Her King
And now—to accept the game, and do what Jenny believed impossible—here are the requested number of lines from my next novel. I am creating them on the fly. They will fit exactly, when I have imagined 76 prior pages. Jen will be watching, and I cannot fail her.
From Clouds of Green and Blue
"Miss, but I...cannot give you the ticket..." he stammered, not wanting to say it.
"Explain to me why," she demanded. "This is the station—I know you sell them. I arrived in this spot six months ago, with such a ticket!"
"Sweet Miss—you are unescorted-" he was near to tears.
"I came here that way, just now! How can I not depart if I have clearly come?" Her fury whitened her knuckles on his windowsill.
"I'm not allowed, you see..." he blanched. "A blind person must have a companion, and you are so young..." He would have reached beneath his glass to touch her hand, but Clara spun away indignantly...directly into the crowd, who paid her little heed.
There Maria, and Jenny. I hope you two are tickled pink...
Here is my list of new participants: (This game has expanded. A few on my list may have already been tagged.)
Mark Paul Jacobs (If he has reached so far in his new book)
Lisette Brodey
Cliff Ball
RJ McDonnell
Jen Knox
Stacy Juba
Al Boudreau
Kimberly Kinrade
.
.
.
A quiet little corner to share work by outstanding Indie authors. What I cannot find out from them, I'll make up.
Showing posts with label Maria Savva. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Maria Savva. Show all posts
Wednesday, June 20, 2012
Thursday, September 8, 2011
BestsellerBound is 1 year old!...
You can do a lot of damage by writing a book and tossing it out for the world to consume. Think of all the people you will bother by doing it...
Rather, think of all the fun you will have when lots of other people help out; Tweeting, and Facebooking, and interviewing, and sharing and reading and Kindleboarding and tagging and reviewing and laughing and all that other stuff you really won't have the least amount of time to do....
BestsellerBound.com is 1 year old! To celebrate, we have given away a ton of stuff. Being one year old now is a small marvel. (lots of startup forums die on the web somewhat quickly. That's sad...) Anyway! There is a group of authors and readers at BsB, who are just silly enough to get involved in your efforts, whatever they are. Some of us won't have the common sense to stay out of it, in fact. We are shameless.
You don't really want to be doing this alone?...do you? People will think you are anti-social....
Don't ask what BestsellerBound.com is, you already know. Ask what it does.......
1. Allows self-promotion.
2. Allows sharing - for any reason.
3. Allows people like me to join. :)
4. Allows anyone to suggest anything that might help sell books.
5. Bands together to beat the Holy Crap out of poor reviewers.
(Not really...but we might write some nasty stories about them.)
6. Write some really nasty stories about poor reviewers.
1. Throws you kicking and screaming into self-promotion. (That suddenly hit me as a new No. 1)
7. Cry, when you are feeling blue.
8. Put your stuff into books sometimes, and offer them all over the world for free.
9. Shares stories about pets - but they have a special section for those posts, to keep the other ones clean and fresh smelling.
10. Scoff at any suggestion that none of us know a thing about what we are doing, because we are going to learn, dammit.
11. Did I say "Allow self-promotion"?
12. Blog. We blog like mad.
13. Fix stuff that's broken... book tech support. Some of us are good at that sort of thing, because we are always breaking things...
14. Defend self-publishing, with pitchforks... That's my idea :)
BestsellerBound.com is more than a forum, though it began as a place where Darcia, Stacy and Maria could play and be queens of the sandbox. Now, BsB has a massive group on Goodreads - a Facebook page for the free anthologies - a Twitter presence - a channel on YouTube for book trailers - BsB has won web awards ...
What has it been like, being a member there?
Fun.
What will it be like, being a member there?
Fun.
Who's already there? (You've been wondering, right?)
Deep breath - - -
Darcia Helle, Stacy Juba, Maria Savva, Jason C. McIntyre, Mark Paul Jacobs, Al Boudreau, Heather Paye, Jaleta Clegg, Jenny Hilborne, Charlie Courtland, Susan Helene Gottfried, Jen Knox, Magnolia Belle, J. Michael Radcliffe - these are five star masters, folks... Danielle Bourdon, Ami Blackwelder, Amy Saunders, Alexander M. Zoltai, Saffina Desforges, Anjuelle Floyd, Ann Mauren, Pavarti Devi, Anne Whitfield, Dan Schwartz, Cliff Ball, Dan L. Hays, Sibel Hodge, Debra L. Martin, Doug DePew, Gail M. Baugniet, Gareth Lewis, Heather Hildenbrand, Paul Mansfield Keefe, J. Guevara, J.T. Cummins, Jaime McDougall, James Everington, Sandra MacKay, Jemima Valentino, Stephen Goldin, Jennifer Swan, Jerry Schwartz, Jess C. Scott, Valerie J. Long - big list, huh? Julie Elizabeth Powell, Kate M. George, Kelli Sue Landon, Keta Diablo, Kristie Cook, KT Banks, Lainey Bancroft, Malika Bourne, Margaret Duarte, Markee Anderson, Mark McKenna, Marty Beaudet, Cynthia Meyers-Hanson, Michael Scott Miller, Monica Brinkman, Neil Schiller, Nurture Your Books, P.I Barrington, Raven Corinn Carluk, R.J. McDonnell, Ryne Douglas Pearson, Jennifer Lane, S.C. Pennington, Valerie Maarten, Simon Royle, Jinx Schwartz, Sharon E. Cathcart, Shaun Jeffrey, Christopher C. Payne, Shelley Stout, Steven Symes, Stuart Jaffe, Sue Ann Bowling, Susan Schreyer, Tom Gahan, William T. Prince, Ty Johnston, Lynne Stevie, Valerie J. Long, Valerie Ormond, Belinda Kroll, Will Granger, J.W. Coffey I know I've missed someone, but will put their name in if they call me on it....
That is just a smattering, believe me. (And, I bet those folks haven't been called a smatter all week.)
At the least, its a good group of those I could snatch links for easily... BestsellerBound has 461 members, some who've been at this for years and sell thousands of books; who have been downloaded tens of thousands of times. Mr. McIntyre has reached the milestone of more than a hundred thousand downloads... We are a family of writers who design covers; who edit - professionally and for bizarre fun; who blog and interview; who review. Some of us have only one book in print, others have impressive catalogs of work available. One of our members - Mr. Pearson - has even had two books made into movies... We have IT gurus in our midst, eBook formatting experts...and chefs; short story writers, and a few who don't seem able to type the words The End....even one old curmudgeon who works in traditional publishing, if you can imagine that! (Two, actually, but the other one is a sweetheart.) BestsellerBound also has members who are highly respected bloggers, who have organized their own online communities and web shows for Indie book promotion.
Here is the point - I always leave that for the bottom - BestsellerBound is a family of authors and readers who love books. We love working with them, talking about them, sharing them. In the vast expanse of the World Wide Web, there are not many places who just say, "Come join us. Now, what would you like to do?" Conversely, there are plenty of places asking for your money first, then they make some attempt to like you.
Not so, that crap, at BestsellerBound.com I found them early in their first weeks, and fell in love instantly. You will too.
Here are links to the BestsellerBound products - always free to read or download:
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbssanthology.pdf
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbanthology2.pdf
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbanthologyvolone.pdf
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbanthologyvoltwo.pdf
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbanthologyvolthree.pdf
http://stacyjuba.com/blog/2011/09/10/win-book-prizes-during-bestseller-bound-birthday-bash/
Here are links to other blogs about this anniversary:
Darcia: http://quietfurybooks.com/blog/2011/09/bestsellerbound-giveaway
Cindy: http://mchanson714.blogspot.com/2011/09/year-anniversary-celebration.html
Maria: http://www.goodreads.com/author_blog_posts/1521185-bestsellerbound-is-1-year-old
Jaime: http://www.inkyblots.com/bestseller-bound-turns-one-giveaway/
Susan: http://westofmars.com/2011/09/06/its-the-bestseller-bound-birthday/
Jaleta: http://jaletaclegg.blogspot.com/2011/09/best-hang-out-ive-found-online.html
Here is the list of prizes: (Giveaway is closed. Winners have been notified. )
1. 1 coupon code for a free ebook copy of The Dream by Maria Savva from Smashwords.
2. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of any one title by Darcia Helle.
3. 1 coupon code for The Choice by Sydney S. Song from Smashwords.
4. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of Echo Falls by Jaime McDougall.
5. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of any one title by Gareth Lewis.
6. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of The Other Room by James Everington
7. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of any one title by Susan Helene Gottfried
8. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of Nexus Point by Jaleta Clegg
9. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for a free eBook copy of 2010 Hindsight: A Year of Personal Growth, In Spite of Myself by Sharon E. Cathcart
10. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for a free eBook copy of Caraliza and also Breathing into Stone by Joel Kirkpatrick (That's me!)
11. 1 free hardbound, signed copy of Joel’s secret 5th novel, shipped the week it is released.
12. 1 coupon code for a free ebook copy of Sink or Swim by Stacy Juba.
Please come join us for all the fun there. We would love to get to know you, learn more about what you write. BestsellerBound.com wants you to reach your dream, and be read by someone who never knew you had written a book. That's like getting a hug from Mama.
.
.
.
Rather, think of all the fun you will have when lots of other people help out; Tweeting, and Facebooking, and interviewing, and sharing and reading and Kindleboarding and tagging and reviewing and laughing and all that other stuff you really won't have the least amount of time to do....
Courtesy of Jaleta Clegg |
What do we like best? Readers. (readers are a who, not a what.) Writers who read. Writers who have questions. Writers with a sense of humor, and even some grumpy ones, like me...as long as they continue to Tweet.
You don't really want to be doing this alone?...do you? People will think you are anti-social....
Don't ask what BestsellerBound.com is, you already know. Ask what it does.......
1. Allows self-promotion.
2. Allows sharing - for any reason.
3. Allows people like me to join. :)
4. Allows anyone to suggest anything that might help sell books.
5. Bands together to beat the Holy Crap out of poor reviewers.
(Not really...but we might write some nasty stories about them.)
6. Write some really nasty stories about poor reviewers.
1. Throws you kicking and screaming into self-promotion. (That suddenly hit me as a new No. 1)
7. Cry, when you are feeling blue.
8. Put your stuff into books sometimes, and offer them all over the world for free.
9. Shares stories about pets - but they have a special section for those posts, to keep the other ones clean and fresh smelling.
10. Scoff at any suggestion that none of us know a thing about what we are doing, because we are going to learn, dammit.
11. Did I say "Allow self-promotion"?
12. Blog. We blog like mad.
13. Fix stuff that's broken... book tech support. Some of us are good at that sort of thing, because we are always breaking things...
14. Defend self-publishing, with pitchforks... That's my idea :)
BestsellerBound.com is more than a forum, though it began as a place where Darcia, Stacy and Maria could play and be queens of the sandbox. Now, BsB has a massive group on Goodreads - a Facebook page for the free anthologies - a Twitter presence - a channel on YouTube for book trailers - BsB has won web awards ...
What has it been like, being a member there?
Fun.
What will it be like, being a member there?
Fun.
Who's already there? (You've been wondering, right?)
Deep breath - - -
Darcia Helle, Stacy Juba, Maria Savva, Jason C. McIntyre, Mark Paul Jacobs, Al Boudreau, Heather Paye, Jaleta Clegg, Jenny Hilborne, Charlie Courtland, Susan Helene Gottfried, Jen Knox, Magnolia Belle, J. Michael Radcliffe - these are five star masters, folks... Danielle Bourdon, Ami Blackwelder, Amy Saunders, Alexander M. Zoltai, Saffina Desforges, Anjuelle Floyd, Ann Mauren, Pavarti Devi, Anne Whitfield, Dan Schwartz, Cliff Ball, Dan L. Hays, Sibel Hodge, Debra L. Martin, Doug DePew, Gail M. Baugniet, Gareth Lewis, Heather Hildenbrand, Paul Mansfield Keefe, J. Guevara, J.T. Cummins, Jaime McDougall, James Everington, Sandra MacKay, Jemima Valentino, Stephen Goldin, Jennifer Swan, Jerry Schwartz, Jess C. Scott, Valerie J. Long - big list, huh? Julie Elizabeth Powell, Kate M. George, Kelli Sue Landon, Keta Diablo, Kristie Cook, KT Banks, Lainey Bancroft, Malika Bourne, Margaret Duarte, Markee Anderson, Mark McKenna, Marty Beaudet, Cynthia Meyers-Hanson, Michael Scott Miller, Monica Brinkman, Neil Schiller, Nurture Your Books, P.I Barrington, Raven Corinn Carluk, R.J. McDonnell, Ryne Douglas Pearson, Jennifer Lane, S.C. Pennington, Valerie Maarten, Simon Royle, Jinx Schwartz, Sharon E. Cathcart, Shaun Jeffrey, Christopher C. Payne, Shelley Stout, Steven Symes, Stuart Jaffe, Sue Ann Bowling, Susan Schreyer, Tom Gahan, William T. Prince, Ty Johnston, Lynne Stevie, Valerie J. Long, Valerie Ormond, Belinda Kroll, Will Granger, J.W. Coffey I know I've missed someone, but will put their name in if they call me on it....
That is just a smattering, believe me. (And, I bet those folks haven't been called a smatter all week.)
At the least, its a good group of those I could snatch links for easily... BestsellerBound has 461 members, some who've been at this for years and sell thousands of books; who have been downloaded tens of thousands of times. Mr. McIntyre has reached the milestone of more than a hundred thousand downloads... We are a family of writers who design covers; who edit - professionally and for bizarre fun; who blog and interview; who review. Some of us have only one book in print, others have impressive catalogs of work available. One of our members - Mr. Pearson - has even had two books made into movies... We have IT gurus in our midst, eBook formatting experts...and chefs; short story writers, and a few who don't seem able to type the words The End....even one old curmudgeon who works in traditional publishing, if you can imagine that! (Two, actually, but the other one is a sweetheart.) BestsellerBound also has members who are highly respected bloggers, who have organized their own online communities and web shows for Indie book promotion.
Here is the point - I always leave that for the bottom - BestsellerBound is a family of authors and readers who love books. We love working with them, talking about them, sharing them. In the vast expanse of the World Wide Web, there are not many places who just say, "Come join us. Now, what would you like to do?" Conversely, there are plenty of places asking for your money first, then they make some attempt to like you.
Not so, that crap, at BestsellerBound.com I found them early in their first weeks, and fell in love instantly. You will too.
Here are links to the BestsellerBound products - always free to read or download:
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbssanthology.pdf
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbanthology2.pdf
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbanthologyvolone.pdf
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbanthologyvoltwo.pdf
http://www.darciahelle.com/ebooks/bsbanthologyvolthree.pdf
http://stacyjuba.com/blog/2011/09/10/win-book-prizes-during-bestseller-bound-birthday-bash/
Here are links to other blogs about this anniversary:
Darcia: http://quietfurybooks.com/blog/2011/09/bestsellerbound-giveaway
Cindy: http://mchanson714.blogspot.com/2011/09/year-anniversary-celebration.html
Maria: http://www.goodreads.com/author_blog_posts/1521185-bestsellerbound-is-1-year-old
Jaime: http://www.inkyblots.com/bestseller-bound-turns-one-giveaway/
Susan: http://westofmars.com/2011/09/06/its-the-bestseller-bound-birthday/
Jaleta: http://jaletaclegg.blogspot.com/2011/09/best-hang-out-ive-found-online.html
Here is the list of prizes: (Giveaway is closed. Winners have been notified. )
1. 1 coupon code for a free ebook copy of The Dream by Maria Savva from Smashwords.
2. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of any one title by Darcia Helle.
3. 1 coupon code for The Choice by Sydney S. Song from Smashwords.
4. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of Echo Falls by Jaime McDougall.
5. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of any one title by Gareth Lewis.
6. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of The Other Room by James Everington
7. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of any one title by Susan Helene Gottfried
8. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for free ebook copy of Nexus Point by Jaleta Clegg
9. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for a free eBook copy of 2010 Hindsight: A Year of Personal Growth, In Spite of Myself by Sharon E. Cathcart
10. 1 coupon code from Smashwords for a free eBook copy of Caraliza and also Breathing into Stone by Joel Kirkpatrick (That's me!)
11. 1 free hardbound, signed copy of Joel’s secret 5th novel, shipped the week it is released.
12. 1 coupon code for a free ebook copy of Sink or Swim by Stacy Juba.
Please come join us for all the fun there. We would love to get to know you, learn more about what you write. BestsellerBound.com wants you to reach your dream, and be read by someone who never knew you had written a book. That's like getting a hug from Mama.
.
.
.
Friday, January 14, 2011
My Favorite Reads of 2010
Late, but still great. (no order to my adoration.)
There are so many things to say, again, about Charlie Courtland's beautiful Elizabeth Bathory. The best thing to say it that it should be read by all of you.
“Charlie Courtland has taken a time and event in history and put a story to it that would rival the actual events. She takes the reported facts as well as many of the rumors of the day and spins them into a story so believable that is could be the true events as they transpired.
This story is not for the weak of heart as there is much madness and despair. Be prepared to be sucked into the story and become a part of it. You will see the blood spatters and will feel the actual weight of the horror as it unfolds.”
Amazon reviewer, Sept. 18, 2010
Jason McIntyre unravels your imagination with his words, and presents a better version, which you cannot help but love.
"This is a roller coaster ride: you're in the hot sun, chugging to the top, anticipating the drop the whole way and then--boom--the drop comes and you're gasping for air. The hot wind blasts you and your guts are in your throat. In the last half of the book, some scenes had me by the larynx. Highly recommended!"
Dvier, Sony Reader Store
This is a new cover for Danielle Bourdon's nightmare, and exactly the creature I saw in my own mind.
"Dreoteth is one of the more unique books I've read in a long time."
Daniel L. Carter, October, 2010
Heather Paye illustrates the perplexities of childhood; feeling invisible, yet seemingly always in trouble.
"...It was hard to put this book down without proceeding further. I found this reading material very close to the heart reading. It is a book I would recommend for all the general public. This young writer I feel will go very far in writing more books in the near future."
Joyce L. Paclik, April 19,2009
Joyce L. Paclik, April 19,2009
Very shortly, one of my next interviews. Jen Hilborne writes a vicious mystery.
"I read this book in one sitting--could not put it down! Loved the San Francisco setting and the shout out to the Gold Dust Lounge! Would like to see more of the characters created for this book. Hopefully Ms. Hilborne has more Mac Jackson stories... "
Amazon reviewer, June 30, 2010
The first of my Darcia Helle experiences. She made me laugh, then chilled me before the laughter died away.
"I have read all of this author's books and have loved them all but this one has it
all humor with an edge. I could not put this book down the characters are still in
my head I hated to see the last page I wanted more."
Lorraine A. Benton, July 14, 2010
all humor with an edge. I could not put this book down the characters are still in
my head I hated to see the last page I wanted more."
Lorraine A. Benton, July 14, 2010
I want to flee the earth, in search of this woman; Captain Dace. Jaleta Clegg gave me a new childhood heroine.
"This book was hard to put down once I got into it. There is something very special about Dace, something very relate-able. This is a wild ride that at points even brought me to tears with the heartfelt and sympathetic character interactions."
Bobbie Berendson, March 19, 2010
Bobbie Berendson, March 19, 2010
Maria Savva creates a near vacuum between her two characters, and they still harbor love which can withstand the damage.
Amazon Link
Amazon Link
"What's beautiful about this novel is that as the plot opens up and takes its twists and turns, the relationship between husband and wife remains the strength of the prose. These two people are so confused, so in love, and have so much to contend with. They need to talk! And each time they do, they seem to say everything but what they need to say. I kept thinking the world seemed against them, but all they really needed was to confide in each other, to share. Notice how I'm speaking of these characters as though I know them? This is Savva's magic."
J.L. Knox, Dec. 28, 2010
J.L. Knox, Dec. 28, 2010
Next week's Featured author; William T. Prince. His character, Clint Buchanan is humble, as he is tall, but he cannot shake trouble, which rides in an outlaw gang of Texas bikers.
Amazon Link
Amazon Link
"Action packed, a real triller to be sure. The characters are full, rounded and you come to know them as people you want as your friends. 'Sasquatch' himself is a little part in all of us, the good parts, of course. It was a pleasure to read this book, and I look forward to getting my hands on the sequel."
Jay Henderson, June 4, 2010
Jay Henderson, June 4, 2010
Remove the two most powerful men in America, within hours of one another, then stand back to observe if the Constitution will unravel before your eyes. Who, in all the world, might be to blame?
Amazon Link
Amazon Link
"As Beaudet adds layer on layer to the story, it’s like a punch in the gut. I kept thinking, this could really happen.…'By a Thread' has the ring of authenticity—It’s obvious that Beaudet has done his homework when it comes to Mormon customs and culture, to the finer points of our Constitution, in the descriptions of exotic locales such as Vienna and Munich. Most importantly, he understands that love is transcendent." [This is an excerpt. To read the full review, click here.]
Neil Badders, Minneapolis, MN*7 November 2010
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Jurisprudence - The Philosophy of Law in the UK, with a darling wig.
Our Maria has a Gold Star on her health report. :) |
I swear, the first week we became acquainted, I though that was a W in her last name. My poor eyes could not help my brain realize those are Vs. Two of them. Is that a British thing? Isn't one enough? Then there is that language thing. Their book page numbers are in stones, or something. She calls herself a solicitor. Over here, we hang up on those people. I had to look it up to find out she's a lawyer. Maria explained, thinking it helped, that she could be called a barrister. Over here, we visit those for coffee, right? Jeez.
She may be the only woman I know, who wishes for more pounds. I know she simply craves them.
We cross paths, or byte trails, usually on Bestsellerbound, which is getting entirely too much attention these days. Maria is somewhat to blame for that. (don't go there. it will suck you in.) When she's active in her daytime (Brits are not nocturnal - like Aussies), she is making the rounds of her web-connections. They are vast. She's trying to fill the Atlantic with posts. Why would a solicitor, with plenty of credentials for the difficult job in British Law need any web connections at all? It was her poor choice to become an Indie author, I'm afraid, that's made her life so hard.
British authors, who self-publish, get no better treatment than any of us. No one cares they invented the language. Reading Maria, you are being blessed by better speech that you ever try to use in daily life, but when her wig comes off, she has to hit the web like we do. Since nothing is printed in Britain anymore, except the books by "she-who-must-not-be-promoted", Maria is building a world-wide following, one reader at a time. She has a lovely advantage over most though. She is promoting some excellent books, and readers are noticing.
Maria admits to being inspired by people - and their lives - from her experiences in her career, sometimes in Family Law. Her heart is in it, and that makes her an astute observer, she catches tiny details, and those appear in the novels and short stories she writes. She's been called on to help people, some in the worst situations of their lives, and Maria has the compassion to remain by their side, perhaps as the only help they can find. She has a wealth of observation to draw from when writing, and she paints characters into her books with very subtle strokes of emotion.
What do I mean by subtle? Read 'Second Chances'. I believe that is a beautiful, loving story. It is filled with terrible pain, and emotional distress, both MC's are lost and brokenhearted. With little more than the barest of tender moments between these two people, I read every page knowing they love one another. You feel love in that book, and Maria did not put that color into her text as she painted the story. She seemed to write something entirely opposite, and yet it is still there to be felt. Subtlety become mastery.
Maria's searched for connections across the vast world-wide seas, from the itty speck of land that once had a famous king...that search somehow connected her to Stacy Juba and Darcia Helle. I haven't the foggiest how it all came about, but they created Bestsellerbound. The process is too tedious to get into, but the results are remarkable. Maria Elena did not just post a few times, then claim jet-lag. She competes with a vengeance for post numbers, and topic starts. We play along, cause she sounds funny.
One person she's latched onto, is Jason McIntyre. Together, they penned a tale - online - about a book reviewer with a sour disposition. Maria began to go all British on that character, causing him to die slightly. (We've not stopped playing with the corpse.) We were shocked, naturally. The sweet, tall, quiet lady with the powdered wig, just tore the guy to shreds. He may be very famous someday, an Internet meme if we can help it; with a Union Jack sticking out from between his eyes.
Maria gets to be famous first, however. Here is a link to my review of 'Second Chances'.
Here is the link - which I am required to state, by British law, is not related to the designer of really snappy women's clothing - link to Maria's own website.
Update: Maria has been so busy she's only a blur. Shortly after this feature posted, she and Jason released 'Cutting the Fat', the entire tale about the reviled Nestor Maronski. That can be seen in the previous posting. But, Maria Elena has knocked us down tossing out books and short story collections - she's a darling pest and we just can't say no when she asks for a read.
'Fusion' snuck up on me though. I was just distracted by so many other Maria things to read. What I found inside was just wonderful. Stories that are vignettes, and not just tales. Rich with imagination, Maria seems to have just glimpsed something that caught her interest, and these delightfult stories were the result, and they are fully formed. Maria does not write story ideas and call them shorts. They are perfectly formed, and perfectly concluded. Always with an unexpected twist. Maria has a subtle wit, and powerful skills to observe the human condition.
Two other colletions are mentioned further below in this feature.
I have the pleasure of calling 'The Dream' a great book, and as of today it's not actually released. It will appear in all the usual places shortly. In this novel Maria asks what we might do differently if we felt we were about to make a terrible mistake. Her character, Lynne, begins to feel crushing doubts about her upcoming wedding, and she's having some haunting dreams that warn her someone will die if she marries Adam. She cannot rid herself of the fear that causes, and she wonders, seriously, if she should call the whole thing off.
This book doesn't seems subtle, but it is. We are privy to every worry that enters Lynne's thoughts, and she does begin to obsess about those warnings in the dream. Wouldn't we all? Wouldn't we all lose our composure? At the point we become overwhelmed as Lynne has...Maria moves us all into the mysterious posibilities of change. What will happen if Lynne changes her mind? Watch for this book, and snatch it.
Maria is pounding her shoe on her keyboard, to get into this discussion with objections:
You do realize, I keep my laptop on overnight, so I will have more hours logged into BestsellerBound than you?
Ha, ha! No actually, I don’t spend that much time on BestsellerBound, I can most frequently be found on Twitter and Facebook. But I do check in on BestsellerBound at least once a day to make sure I keep up with what’s going on. Of course, I spent much more time on there recently writing the Nestor Maronski story.
Explain to those who don’t know: who is Nestor Maronski, and how did he come to be?
Nestor Maronski (such a great name - wish I’d made it up, but that award goes to Jason McIntyre, my co-writer). He’s an evil reviewer (Nestor Maronski that is, not my co-writer LOL). Nestor is a fictional character, an evil book reviewer who hates self-published authors and always writes bad reviews for Indie authors.
He is the main character in BestsellerBound’s online novella, written by me and Jason McIntyre. The idea for the story came up in a discussion about reviews. Darcia Helle had the original idea that all of us should jointly write an online novel about an evil reviewer who gets murdered. Jason loved the idea and wrote the first chapter, and the rest is history.
How many behind-the-scenes emails did you and Jason pass?
Hardly any. I didn’t really know Jason well. I’d met him on Goodreads or Twitter (can’t remember which) and then invited him to BestsellerBound a few days after I’d met him online. We’d chatted a bit on the discussion boards, but didn’t really know anything about each other or our writing styles when we started writing the online novel. After we’d been writing it for about a week, Jason sent me an email to say that he wasn’t sure we could really continue it for much longer, but I think he was trying to get an idea as to how committed I was to it, because I’d just left Nestor hanging from the ceiling in his bedroom at the end of the previous scene, but Jason had gone on to save him and he’d ended up alive and well in hospital. Jason thought I wanted to end the story by killing Nestor, but I’d been trying to create a murder mystery , so the novel would continue with investigations as to who’d killed Nestor.
(I have to interrupt, to let people know, Maria and Jason killed an ass, not the Christmas donkey.)
When Jason realised that I hadn’t wanted to end the story there, we carried on writing for another week or so, again without exchanging emails. Finally, it came to the point that the online novel was taking up so much time, and Jason had a lot of commitments at home and work, so he sent me an email suggesting that if I wanted to continue the story on my own, he was happy to let me do that, or we could jointly kill off Nestor in the next couple of chapters. By that stage I thought of the story as a joint effort and didn’t want to carry it on without Jason’s input, so we wrote the last two chapters. At that stage we did discuss in an email how it should end.
Jason wrote the penultimate * chapter and sent me an email with his suggestions for an ending, but left it up to me. I ended up writing the ending using a couple of his ideas to tie up some loose ends, but ultimately I wrote it as I’d been writing the other chapters; without a plan. It seemed to work because we had some good feedback from the readers and over 1000 hits on the discussion thread for the story.
*penultimate: British word for set-up to the finale.
You called out to the readers, to join in if we felt the urge. We just sat by, amazed at what you two were doing. How does that feel now, being exactly one half of that story?
It’s a great feeling of accomplishment, more than anything else. If I’m truthful, I was so blown away by Jason’s first chapter I didn’t think I’d be able to continue the story and nearly chickened out. But then once I started writing it, it was so much fun, I couldn’t wait from day to day to read Jason’s chapter so I could write my own.
You and Jason were quite destructive with Nestor; was that a new twist for you, writing something fairly violent?
Yes, definitely, and to be honest I think I was a bit of a wimp. Darcia made a comment at the end that she wished Nestor had suffered more, and I think that some readers would have been thinking something similar. I was even thinking it when I was writing that I should write something more violent, but to be honest I find it hard to write anything too gruesome, it’s definitely not my forte. I don’t think you’ll find me writing any violent crime fiction any time soon. I was glad that Jason’s penultimate chapter contained so much violence against Maronski, all I had to do was finish him off.
It’s not well known, you were an intern psychologist at the Clerkwood Women’s Correctional Facility in Leicester, for two years. Is that what drove you to complete your solicitor exams and become a barrister?
LOL. How did you find that out? I thought I’d managed to keep it a secret. I should have known that when Darcia Helle was released from that facility she’d blab... she always was a bit unstable.
Do you wear the wig?
Yes, I wear it all the time, especially when I’m out shopping.
Can I get one?
Yes, you can even get them on Amazon these days. That’s true, by the way, I’ve just looked it up.
It is certainly true that you circled up all the toddlers in your infants school first year class and read Keats to them, isn’t it.
Of course that’s true, and Shakespeare as well. (she was one of those students! we call that cheeky.)
I discovered your involvement with a great outreach charity. What would you like to tell me about Shadow Forest Authors?
Shadow Forest Authors (SFA) was created by Christine Jones, a fellow author I met through Goodreads.com. It's a charitable organisation set up with the aim of stopping illiteracy worldwide. Authors from every genre are encouraged to donate just one copy of their print book to one of the beneficiaries listed on the website, which include Book Aid, Education Aid and various prison and school charities which collect donated books. The idea is that these books will be sent where they are urgently needed.
There is a list of authors on the site who have donated books. Anyone can support SFA's work by buying one of the listed books and donating it to one of the charities listed.
How did you become involved with them?
I was invited to donate my books by Christine Jones, the founder of SFA. I have donated a copy of 'A Time to Tell' and 'Pieces of a Rainbow'. Anyone can go onto the website and buy those books, or any of the others listed in order to donate them to a cause. I would encourage other authors to get in touch with SFA and donate a copy of their books. The listed beneficiaries are working hard to make sure donated books are given to people who really need them. Illiteracy is a major issue worldwide, and we as authors are in a prime position to help out.
Do you have trouble driving on the left, or is it really easy? It doesn’t look it.
I’ve often wondered that about driving on the right.
(I've been informed that Maria is famous for getting lost in London.)
David Tennant or Paul McGann?
David Tennant
What exactly is a Toss-Pot?
It means an idiot; it does have a rather ruder meaning, but as this is a family website I won’t tell you. You’ll have to look it up on Wikipedia. (if this is a family site, I going to have less fun than I expected.)
James, in ‘Second Chances’, is so accurately drawn, I really felt some of his frustration. Was it troublesome; writing a man’s perspective on a life-completely-under-the-bosses-thumb?
I wrote it from the perspective of a female author writing about a man’s perspective on life-completely-under-the-bosses-thumb, so no it was quite easy really. But seriously, I didn’t think too deeply about whether I was getting it right or whether a man would read the book and say ‘this is what a woman would say or do’. I just wrote it from the perspective of how a woman thinks a man would behave in a given situation, and as you must know by now, women are always right about these things.
Between James and Pamela, you walked a narrow line of objectivity. I know that you have a preference for one opinion over the other. Did you work to keep it hidden? (I won’t ask with whom you sided most often.)
I didn’t see it like that when I was writing. When I was writing Pamela’s feelings I was seeing this from her viewpoint and so I agreed with her then, and when I was writing James’s feelings I wrote from his point of view and would also agree with that. I think the essence of this story is that there is really no one to blame when relationships break down, both parties will feel hard done by and both will have valid reasons to hate the other along the way. It’s how people deal with their emotions and feelings that really matters.
It's only hours before this posts, no time for interaction; let's see if Maria will answer this in the comments.
I honestly feel that Kate played a villain's role in that book. Not to give away plot, but she was hardly helpful. Does it surprise you I would feel that way?
*
Do you keep your work, as a solicitor, out of your books, or does it actually enhance how you write?
I think it enhances my writing to an extent because in my job I meet a lot of people and hear a lot of stories. That way I get a lot of inspiration for characters and stories. And of course, James, the main character in ‘Second Chances’ is a solicitor.
Have you considered writing a courtroom drama?
No. But it might happen one day.
Have you created a character that you truly disliked? Who was it?
Nestor Maronski
What inspired ‘Coincidences’, your book about a woman’s search for her father?
That’s going back about 13 years, so I can’t be sure what inspired it exactly. I do remember that the idea to write a novel came after I read Paulo Coelho’s ‘The Alchemist’. It’s such a simple book, but it says so much and is one of my all time favourites. I think I wanted to write a book with that much power, to change the way people think about things. I don’t think I’ve succeeded yet, but that’s the fun of writing, we’re always learning, always improving. Every critical review of a book will give an author the spur they need to challenge themselves to be better. When I look back at ‘Coincidences’, I know that I have come very far as a writer since I wrote that. But even though I am afraid to read it because I know I’ll be hypercritical of it, I’m still proud of it as it was the start of something.
Few authors can generate enough energy for a narrative that spans half a lifetime. But you did it with ‘A Time to Tell’. What did you have to do, to keep track of your characters’ stories over such a length of time?
It isn’t easy. At one stage I had to do a sort of family-tree plan because I was losing track of everyone. You also have to keep cross checking everything to make sure everything makes sense. It’s a lot of hard work. It took me about 7 years to finish, but was well worth the effort. I am fond of that book.
We had just about got you Brits somewhat straight; what with ‘Are You Being Served?’, ‘Doctor Who’, ‘Mr. Bean’ and such. Then along comes Jo Rowling, and she paints you lot out to be all quirky again. Haven’t you just wanted to cross her chin with a fiver?
‘Cross her chin with a fiver’ isn’t a phrase I have come across before. What does it mean?
(nicely avoided!)
Quickly, without naming them, think of your favorite three books, written by men. Now, think only of the author’s first names. Then, write them, first names only, on a sheet of paper. (doesn’t matter, side-by-side, or over one another) Look at the name in the middle. Yes, or no; you would totally date that man if you had the chance?
Yes, totally.
If you were called by an agent: they had seen you all over the web, and quietly read one of your novels. All you had to do, to be published world-wide, was surrender all your self-publishing and drop those ISBN numbers. What would your next thought be?
How much will they pay me?
I love self-publishing and the freedom that goes with it. It would have to be a very large sum of money to entice me away from it... And the only reason money would entice me now is because I am out of work and penniless. If I could earn a decent wage from my self-published books, not even that much, maybe the equivalent of the average wage, I would prefer to be self-published, because when you go with a mainstream publisher you have to give up some of your rights in the books.
The other thing that would attract me to a mainstream publisher would be if they could guarantee that one of my books would be made into a movie. I love films and have always dreamed of seeing a film made from one of my books.
(she painted that rainbow)
Which of the two has self-publishing been for you: a struggle, or a joy?
Both. The struggle comes with the editing, which is a never-ending cycle of stress and anguish. The joy is just about everything else.
You admit to a phase in your youth, when you read horror and thriller stories. Have you thought about writing something spooky?
I have written a couple of spooky short stories, which are featured in my upcoming collection ‘Fusion’. But I haven’t written horror. I don’t know if I ever will. When I was a child my dad used to love horror films and we’d all sit in front of the TV as a family and watch them even though they were really scary. So if anyone was wondering why I’m so deranged that’s the reason.
I used to be obsessed with ghost stories at one stage. Me and my sister watched a horror movie about a doll who came alive and killed people, when we were really young, definitely under 10 years old. This stayed with me for ages. I remember being scared of one of my sister’s dolls for a long time. Why am I telling you this? I have no idea. I think what I’m trying to say is that I probably would be able to write a decent horror book because of my background, but as yet I haven’t felt the urge. (Nestor agrees)
Back to ‘Second Chances’ (a twisted pun, that.) It stands out from your other works, as a Romance without any romance at all. I admired that, and believe I complimented you for it. How did that amazing bit of control happen?
I am quite a romantic person, but not overtly, so I suppose that it’s part of my character that has come out in the novel, without me even realising it. I don’t read romance books nowadays, although I read the entire Mills & Boons collection when I was in my teens, so maybe some of my romantic ideals come from that. These days, I prefer books with a bit more substance, that are not formulaic, so when I’m writing my own books this preference comes out.
Is there one person, who has not written their review, in spite of the pleading you have stooped to doing? May we call them out here, and tell them to get cracking?
Well, okay, I’ll make a public plea to everyone and anyone who has read and enjoyed my books to please go onto Amazon and write a review. It will only take a couple of minutes and it helps greatly. I am making that plea on behalf of all self-published authors. We need your help, as readers, to let the world know about our books. You don’t have to write a long-winded review, just a couple of lines about why you liked it. You can be sure that whenever a self-published author gets a good review on Amazon, they are smiling, and it means more to us than you’ll ever know. End of plea.
Which means her sister is off the hook again.... :)
Thanks, Love!
***
I'm hearing that Maria is a stunning cook, and that an invitation to dine in her home is considered a tremendous honor. I've promised my informant I would not reveal their name, but there is a favorite tale circulating about an incident with pheasant and the wrong wine. She has been pestered by friends who want her to write a cookbook. With her stature, figuratively and literarily, she could be another Julia! Praps I should add that to her name?She loves me now, BTW.
Here are the links to her song dedications from the teaser page.
Carlos Santana - Maria Maria
Blondie - Maria
Scooter - Maria (I like it loud)
Ricky Martin - Maria
All Time Low - Dear Maria, count me in
Bobby McFerrin - Ave Maria
Café Tacuba - Maria my fav.
Susan Baca - Maria Lando
Maria! Maria! Maria!
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