Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Author Spotlight Shines On Dina Rae



I would like to welcome Dina Rae to Author spotlight today.

Tell us a little about yourself and how you became a writer.

I’m a former teacher who lost her job a year and half ago. Always wanted to be a writer and suddenly found the time.

So what better chance huh.

I know you write different genres like myself but do you have a certain theme or trademark to your stories?

Yes, I’ve written three so far, 2 published. All of them use extensive research and have supernatural elements to them.

Do you have an agent and how important do you think they are in the publication world?

I am unagented and have no idea about their importance.

Lol, not many writers do but in my opinion it is really up to where you want to go in your career.


How do your stories come to life, from fiction or fantasy?

I try using everyday dialogue and everyday problems to humanize my characters.

Are you a ‘go with the flow’ writer or do you have structure?

I have structure towards the end, but the beginning and middle are really vague notions that work themselves magically out when I put pen to paper.

I love when a story and the characters take on a life of their own, to me I feel when that happens I know I'm on the right track


Have you always wanted to be a writer or did you want to be something else?

I wanted to be a teacher and I was until I got laid off. Writing was always an unattainable dream, like being a professional tennis player.


What groups are you affiliated with and how have they helped you through your journey of publication?

I am a member of the American Christian Fiction Writer’s and can be found on Authonomy.com, a writer’s site. I belong to several google and yahoo reading groups as well. None of these groups have helped me get published, but they have helped my writing. I got published the old fashioned way, pounding the keyboard with queries and sample chapters to agencies and publishers who liked the genre my books were in. Yes, I have a copy of Jeff Herman’s Guide to Agents, Publishers, and Editors.

How much marketing do you involve yourself in and with the mass consumption of social media, does this play a part in your marketing choice?

Funny you ask. Was not one to jump on the Facebook/Twitter/Pinterest/etc. bandwagon. Now I am. They are free and invaluable for promotion. I even built a blog, although it’s not ready, and purchased a domain, dinarae.co.

Here’s a random one for you. If you could be one animal, which would it be and why?

Dolphin-smart, pack animals who can communicate, and sweet

Oh, I so agree!


What would you say is your inspiration to write in general and scene based?

I love TV and the movies and books. Fiction has always been escape. It’s amazing to see a movie that you’ve created play inside of your mind.

I'm a visual creator also and I find it quite helpful when creating a scene and especially an action scene. DH would prefer the love scenes. lol


With your titles and covers, did you get much of a say in this matter and how important is it to you to have input?

Yes, I got full say from each publisher. And it’s very important. The cover needs to match the book’s description and give the potential reader an idea of what kind of book it is.

Do you have any tips for other aspiring writers or authors out there?

Read, read, write, write…Don’t ever put down your manuscript. Even if all you can come up with is a paragraph for the day. The longer it sits, the more likely you’ll never finish it. And when you read, notice how the author sets up the story, the plot, shifts into backstory, separates the chapters, etc. Invaluable information that truly helps.


So, I think we’ve gotten to know you a little now. How’s about we step it up a notch. Are you panicking? Lol. Do you have any dirty little secrets or confessions you’d like to share with us- what’s on the blog stays on the blog, right guys. (wink)

I fear a terrible review and an end to a career that has barely started.

Awwe, Dina. I think everyone at some point receives a not-so-charming review, but we can not please everybody.

Where’s your favourite place to write?

I write on my second-hand Queen Anne antique desk in my formal living room next to my baby grand piano which I should play more often.


Tell us of your releases- where and when can we buy them?

The Last Degree-www.dippub.com, Amazon.com, BarnesandNoble.com (Released in January of 2012)

It’s free on Kindle right now! It’s about secret societies, New World Order, and the Tribulation. Goes with the 2012 theme this year, our time is up, but different.

Halo of the Damned-eternalpress.biz, barnesandnoble.com, amazon.com, and many more. (Released February 2012)

It’s about a fallen angel who uses his advertising chain as a weapon for Satan’s work. Filled with some Biblical references and advertising ploys.


In one work, how would you best describe yourself? Adaptable.

Now that we’re all friends, tell us your most embarrassing moment?

Haha! Had too many to share when I was drinking, but I quit a long time ago. Recently, I get embarrassed when I’m late and have to walk into a room filled with people and find a place to sit-hate it. Usually an early bird.


I will be in Is there anything else that you would like to share with us?

Go buy a copy of The Last Degree and Halo of the Damned! The Last Degree will be free for 90 days on Kindle.

Well Thank you Dina and I hope you many sales in your future. To find out more about Dina Rae, go to her website http://dinarae.co/

Until next time, happy reading and writing.

Kez

Sunday, April 15, 2012

Fifty Shades Of Grey Has Me Blushing Fifty shades

*Warning! If you can't handle a toe curling read then go no further!*
Fifty Shades of Grey Trilogy
I heard about this series a little while ago and it's heat level and thought, meh' I'll put it on the TBR pile. Then there was all this talk and trashing, of the series and the author over plagiarism etc so it wasn't at the top of my TBR pile at all until an actual reader told me about it and said 'No Way is it a Twilight replica!'
So, I thought I would rev it to the top of my pile and downloaded the free sample because frankly if it was an act of plagiarism, as an author I didn't want to give the girl a dime of my hard earnt cash. I think the sample gave me almost three chapters and by the end I was hitting the BUY button.
There was not a moment where I could spot a word copied and before I knew it I had a lust for more.
It's in a first POV of Anastasia Steele, excuse me if the spelling is mistaken but I'm in a moment of passion and want to get this out there. She meets Grey (her fifty- I'll explain that in a moment) through chance. Unbeknownst to her he is a hard shell on the outside but on the inside a very broken soul he even admits he's fifty shades of F#*ked up and I believe it. Throughout the series they grow together and he learns to trust her and she him.
The intricacies of the characters blew me away, this isn't just a wham bam and slam, hot sex read it's an emotional journey for ALL of the characters as well as me, the reader. I cried twice!
I love their emails and the banter, I most definitely loved the toe curling, flush hot sex scenes, some scenes were not my thing but in no way did they shade me from a good read.
I now have finished my addiction of this series as hubby and kids call it and want to say that although some of the sub characters have either similar mannerisms or history, this series does not piggy back, plagiarize or mimic in any way the Twilight saga. I hear there was a fan fiction release a while ago which had a serious re-write - I don't know the facts of this but I can tell you now, It's awesome in it's own right and E.L James deserves her credit and her money!!!!
Before you judge based on a site declaring a high percentage of plagiarism which has not been proven or word of mouth, read it and judge for yourself.
Fifty Shades Of Grey Trilogy was one of the best reads I have read in a while and I am now a passionate fan.
Well do E.L James and thank you.
Laters ;)

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Author spotlight shines on Kathryn Meyer Griffith


Today
t
he spotlight is shinning brightly on 2012 Epic e-book finalist, Kathryn Meyer Griffith.

Kathryn had generously offered three prizes on my blog today for three lucky winners so make sure you stay tuned and leave a comment.

Tell us a little about yourself and how you became a writer.

Truthfully, what started me off as an author was simply this: As a child, about eight or nine years old (the same time I began to draw pictures in pencil and years before I began to dream about being a singer with my younger brother Jim), I began reading books, science fiction, historical romances and scary books from the library. I had six brothers and sisters and though I had a loving mother and father, a loving family, there was very little money. I can’t say we were poverty poor, but we were poor at times. Sometimes our meals were scarce and we never had extra money for many toys or outside entertainment. I think in my whole young childhood my father only took us out to eat once. Try paying for seven kids and two adults. So we learned to entertain ourselves. Played outside. Climbed trees and hid in deep dirt gullies. Sang, howled really, outside at night on the swing set.

I loved to read. The library books were free and plentiful. I’d sit on my bed, especially during the long summer days and evenings (after chores were done, of course) and read one amazing book after another. If I was lucky, with a chocolate snack or cherry Kool-Aid nearby. Those books, those words on the page, took me away to other places, times and worlds. It was magical. I got lost in people-on-a-spaceship-going–to-some-faraway-planet science fiction books. There was this one horse book when I was a kid that knocked me out, made me cry, and laugh with joy at the end it was so real to me and so full of pathos because I loved horses so much. It was called Smoky. Loved that book. Sigh. I never forgot how those wonderful books made me feel…so free. So adventurous. So rich. Like I could be or do anything someday. And when I grew up I wanted to create that magic myself for others. So…that’s why I began writing. And when I get depressed over my writing at times, I remember that.

I remember vividly one day at school (I must have been about 10 or so) when a big box of Weekly Reader books were delivered and we each got to pick one to read. The smell of those new books in that box as I looked at them, the excitement and awe of the other kids over the books and the reverence for those authors, and I thought: Wouldn’t it be something if someday a box of these books were mine…written by me? Oh, to be an author. People respect an author. It was the beginning.

Then there’s also a second part to the question: Why do I keep writing after 39 years? Because I can’t not write. I can’t stop. The stories take over my heart and mind and demand to come out. It’s sort of like birthing a baby (I have one real son and two grandchildren myself). You carry them for a while, a short or long time span, and then once they’re born (published) they go on to be their own individual entities that sometimes continue to amuse and amaze you. Or disappoint you. Whatever.

It's funny how us writer all refer to our books as our babies, we nurture them and watch helplessly as they grow beyond what we ever imagined and then we have to let them free.

I know you write different genres like myself but do you have a certain theme or trademark to your stories?

Most of them have, at least, a touch of the supernatural. Ghosts, witches, vampires, eerie places, mystery and/or murder. A swirl of darkness. And that love or faith can overcome all that darkness in the end.

The happy ever after is a draw card in any novel for me.

Do you have an agent and how important do you think they are in the publication world?

I used to have one, but lost her about eight years ago. Getting, keeping an agent was almost more trouble than it was worth. It’s really hard to get a good agent. I spent months, years, trying to get another one but none believed in me or my writing enough to take me on. Then the epublishers and ebooks came into being and I decided to give them a try. So far so good. Damnation Books/Eternal Press, in the last 20 months, have rereleased (after I revised and updated them) all my old novels going back 29 years! And I’m going to actually self-publish my next book; see how that works. I, as many authors, are starting to learn that you can be a better agent for yourself, especially since the legacy publishers are losing so much influence these days.

How do your stories come to life, from fiction or fantasy?

I’d have to say fiction…or real life that morphs into fiction with a big dose of the supernatural. I like to think of my books (most of them, not the romantic time travel ones) as a slice of real life with a scary element tossed in. To me, at times, real life is even scarier than fiction, don’t you agree?

Abso-freakin-lutely! My life is one big amusment roller-coaster but it's worth it.

Are you a ‘go with the flow’ writer or do you have structure?

Positively, go with the flow. I hate outlines; always go right off course immediately as the characters redirect me to what they want to say, do, feel. The concept and the characters come first and then I just ride along as they spin out their tales.

Me too, although right now I'm filling out a timeline and character charts because it's turned onto a series.

Have you always wanted to be a writer or did you want to be something else?

I wanted to be an artist, the drawing and painting kind, when I was very young, nine or so and into my teens; then in high school I wanted to also sing with my singer/songwriter brother Jim. Be a folk singer/rock star. We even had a duo and then a band for a while. Then at 21 after my son was born I was at home with him, bored, and read a really bad historical romance. Thought I could do better. (Yeah, sure. Was I naive.) Got out my old typewriter with the sticky keys and started typing merrily away. And the bug caught me big time. Took 12 years to get that first novel published because life kept getting in the way and I’ve been hooked ever since. Though I’m still an artist and worked for many years in the world as a graphic designer for a pay check, and I still love to sing, my writing takes all my free time. It’s my obsession; my butterfly stage.

I have a big 'live it' list which is my version of a bucket list and my latest add is Tough Mudder and learning the guitar. lol

How much marketing do you involve yourself in and with the mass consumption of social media, does this play a part in your marketing choice?

The publishers these days, epubs or legacy, want you to self-promote to beat the band. They expect it. I have so many websites: My Space. Bebo. Facebook. Author’s Den, etc. And I’m on so many writer/reader loops; I beg everywhere for reviews, that I feel like I spend most of my time lately just keeping up with the Internet promotions. Truth is, I don’t know how much it all helps, but I have to do it because everyone else does.

I think everything helps Kathryn but you just need to find the balance which you will be happy with.

Here’s a random one for you. If you could be one animal, which would it be and why?

No hesitation. A cat. In a nice loving home. I love cats. I think I must have been one in some other life. Ha, ha. I’ve always had cats. Usually two at a time. My husband and I just lost one, Sasha, whom we loved sooo much. She just disappeared one day. We still miss her every second. She was such a character.

You're talking to someone who has a cat, three dogs and recently two gunie pigs, I couldn't bare to think of them going missing.

With your titles and covers, did you get much of a say in this matter and how important is it to you to have input?

I’ve been writing now for over forty years so I’ve seen a huge change in publishing. With the old legacy publishers an author (unless you were a Stephen King or one of the top sellers) had NO say in their covers. You got the title and the cover the publisher wanted you to have–no debating. No concessions. And I had some I really disliked. But now days with the epubs I have full say in a cover. The cover artist for Damnation Books/Eternal Press, Dawne Dominique, who did my last 13 covers asked for my ideas from the beginning…and tried to give me exactly what I envisioned. It was great. I LOVE my covers now. Aren’t they beautiful?

Grin. I must agree, eternal press drew me in with their covers.

Do you have any tips for other aspiring writers or authors out there?

Gosh, I hate that question and I’m asked it all the time. I could write a book–no, ten books–on all I’ve learned and gone through over my forty year career. I mean it. I had so, so many ups and downs. Sorrows. Frustrations. Triumphs. All I can tell a new writer is that….expect to pay your dues. Even if you make it right out of the gate and think you’ve made it. Payment will come due sooner or later in one form or another. Expect that there’ll be difficult times and accept them when they come. Enjoy the victories. Swallow the defeats. But never give up. Think of your writing as a marathon, not a sprint. I believe a writer is born to be a writer. You must love the act of writing itself and not ever be in it for the riches or the fame. Most of us only get those in dibs and dabs, if ever. Write because you cannot not write. My advice, take it or leave it.

So, I think we’ve gotten to know you a little now. How’s about we step it up a notch. Are you panicking? Lol. Do you have any dirty little secrets or confessions you’d like to share with us- what’s on the blog stays on the blog, right guys. (wink)

Don’t we all have secrets? I have a few. I doubt myself all the time. Think my book, my writing isn’t good enough…no matter how many books I get published (14 now), or glowing reviews and acclaim I get. I also at times wonder: Have I wasted my life writing these endless words onto paper or electronic formats to entertain strangers? Have I lived in near poverty all these years for any reason at all? What was I thinking! Some days I hate being a writer and some days I love it. Sigh.

And…I’m scared to drive. I drive but I hate it and avoid it whenever I can. Spent most of my life hiding that phobia, but now at my mature age (ha, ha) I finally own up to it. Who cares now?

I love driving with the music up loud enough so I can't hear my own singing. I went out last night to pick up chinese with Pearl Jam up so loud and I loved it.

Where’s your favourite place to write?

On my sofa with my laptop in my lap, a cup of chocolate coffee and a snack nearby. Though my dream writing place (that I don’t have now but pray to have when my husband and I retire and get our forever house) is being on a deck outside under a spread of shady trees with my laptop…with a cup of chocolate coffee and a snack nearby.

Chcolate....coffee. My desireables. drool

Tell us of your releases- where and when can we buy them?

Evil Stalks the Night (Damnation Books, July 2012)

The Heart of the Rose (Leisure, 1985; Eternal Press Author’s Revised Edition 2010)

Blood Forge (Leisure, 1989; Damnation Books Author’s Revised Edition, 2012)

Vampire Blood (Zebra, 1991; Damnation Books Author’s Revised Edition, 2011)

The Last Vampire (Zebra, 1992; Damnation Books Author’s Revised Edition out 2010)

Witches (Zebra, 1993; Damnation Books Author’s Revised Edition out 2011)

The Nameless One (Damnation Books Author’s Revised Edition, 2011)

The Calling (Zebra, 1994; Damnation Books Author’s Revised Edition, 2011)

Scraps of Paper (Avalon Books Murder Mystery, 2003)

All Things Slip Away (Avalon Books Murder Mystery, 2006)

Egyptian Heart (Eternal Press 2011)

Winter’s Journey (Eternal Press 2011)

The Ice Bridge (Eternal Press 2011)

Don’t Look Back, Agnes & bonus short story: In This House (Eternal Press 2012)

BEFORE THE END: A Time of Demons (Damnation Books 2010)

The Woman in Crimson (Damnation Books 2010)

The Complete Guide to Writing Paranormal Fiction: Volume 1 (I did the Introduction)

All of these above books can be found at either Eternal Press: http://www.eternalpress.biz/people.php?author=422

Or at Damnation Books: http://damnationbooks.com/people.php?author=79

It has to be said- wowzers!

In one word, how would you best describe yourself?

Persistent.

Is there anything else that you would like to share with us?

Only that my romantic end-of-the-world horror novel THE LAST VAMPIRE-Revised Author's Edition, is a 2012 Epic Ebook Awards Finalist in the horror category, so cross your fingers or say a prayer for me! Though being a nominee is a great honor in itself. I’m happy with that.

So you should be, congrats!

KERRI, THANKS FOR HAVING ME ON YOUR LOVELY BLOG!

Thank you, Kathryn

If you would like to learn more about Kathryn here are her links.

rdgriff@htc.net www.myspace.com./kathrynmeyergriffith www.authorsden.com/kathrynmeyergriffith