Archive for the ‘Guest authors’ Category

  • Guest post: Opera in space (Justine Elyot)

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    It’s terrific to be here today – Hi, Kaz and hi to all your readers. Thank you for having me.

    I’m clueless in a lot of ways and, mad as it might seem, I had never heard the term ‘space opera’ until last year. And yet so many of my formative imaginings revolved around film and TV space opera that I spent about three years – between the ages of 8 and 11 – pretending that I lived on my own version of the Starship Enterprise (but with shinier uniforms). Instead of a grubby kid in crimplene slacks, I was a space princess called Suka who hailed from a fabulous crystal planet, sadly destroyed in an intergalactic war over salt or something.

    And now, having left that childhood universe to stew in the furthest recesses of my memory for nearly thirty years, I have written my first science-fiction story – and the heroine is called Suka! She isn’t a space princess, though, but a slightly sulky starship ensign. The female version of Mr Chekov (I had such a crush on him) perhaps.

    The story appears in the forthcoming Total E-Bound anthology Seeing Stars, and my story is called The Sevarian Way. Here’s the premise:

    In space, no-one can hear you scream. So you can spank as hard as you like.

    Commander Azed Paul and Ensign Suka Demontel are space anthropologists in a future civilisation where kink is illegal. Both have learned to repress their natural sexuality, but Suka’s undergraduate work on the ancient practice of BDSM has captured Paul’s professional attention, and his less academic interest too.

    This makes her the perfect crew member to accompany him to the surface of Paladium Three, a dead planet where old-fashioned service and discipline were woven into the fabric of life.

    There might not be any life forms left there, but what Paul and Suka discover is fascinating evidence of a culture that both realise might have suited them very well…

    The temptation to experiment, risk-free, with the kinks they have been denied all their adult lives, proves too much for the space explorers and they give their fantasies free rein.

    But will this be a unique, never-to-be-repeated experience, or will Paul and Suka find a means to fully embrace the Sevarian Way?

    Reader Advisory: This book contains BDSM

    As you can imagine, this deviates a little from my childhood imaginings, which didn’t contain a lot of sex. This does. To say the least.

    So why have I left it so long before diving back into my beloved sci-fi melodrama? I really don’t know. But I’m extremely glad I did and, now I’ve started, whole galaxies of stories are queuing up in my head to be written.

    Bio: Justine Elyot has written extensively in the genres of erotica and erotic romance for publishers including Black Lace, Xcite Books, Carina Press, Total E-Bound, Resplendence Publishing and Cleis Press. She lives in the UK, where she pursues her passions for history, music and hot men (not necessarily in that order).

    She loves to tweet and generally blether on and can be found on Twitter and Facebook, as well as at her website, JustineElyot.com.

    A WORD FROM KAZ: Loved your background, Justine. You may find that you leave the whys and wherefores of contemporary tales behind for spinning more SF stories. It’s seductive like that. And to my stalwart reader, there’s a competition starting next week with an ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIC prize pack, so have a good weekend and check back on Monday for all the details.

  • Guest post: Silver Underwear (Lisabet Sarai)

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    Micheal Rennie was ill
    The day the earth stood still
    But he told us were we stand ;
    And Flash Gordon was there
    In silver underwear
    Claude Rains was The Invisible Man…

    - “Science Fiction/Double Feature” by Richard O’Brien, from The Rocky Horror Picture Show

    I’ve always loved science fiction. I started with Eleanor Cameron’s Mushroom Planet books when I was in third graden. By high school I’d read most of Heinlein and Asimov. One of the happiest years of my life was in the mid-nineties, when a close friend started a sci fi reading group and I was introduced to Sheri S. Tepper, Octavia Butler, Greg Bear, James Tiptree, and a host of other exciting and talented authors. Every month about a dozen of us would read someone new and then discuss the book over a potluck dinner. The food and wine were usually excellent, but it was the stories that got me high.

    Although I’ve read tons of scifi, I haven’t dared to write much of it. I’m just too intimidated by the required combination of exceptional imagination and scientific precision. Yes, I’ve dabbled a bit – you can find an early effort, recycled as a free read, here – and I have a half-finished M/M scifi novel that’s been sitting untouched on my hard drive for the past six months, but “Bodies of Light“, in the Total-E-Bound anthology Seeing Stars, is my first published science fiction. I’m definitely nervous as to how it will be received. I comfort myself with the notion that most of the readers will view it as romance first, and only secondarily as scifi, but for me, the speculative aspects are at least as important as the love and the sex.

    Bodies of Light is set in the relatively near future – near enough that the heroine’s grandmother remembered watching Alan Shepard’s brief voyage into space. That’s actually a memory of my own – sitting in the elementary school cafeteria, watching the black and white TV mounted on the wall, holding my breath as the rocket blasted off into the unknown. After that, I wanted to be an astronaut, at least until someone informed me that my extreme myopia and pronated arches would disqualify me. (Nobody ever told me that wasn’t a suitable occupation for a girl!)

    In any case, one reason Bodies of Light takes place fifty years rather than fifty centuries in the future is that I’m not sure I can convincingly portray a time and place at such an extreme distance from our own. Today’s world is vastly different from the world into which I was born, in terms of attitudes and styles as well as technology – and we’re talking fewer than half a dozen decades. Furthermore, the rate of change seems to be accelerating. So with this story, I decided to play it safe.

    I couldn’t avoid including some scientific details, though. I spent hours examining the known properties of star systems, seeking a plausible destination for the Archimedes, reviewing the coordinate system for locating objects in space, and refreshing my knowledge of quantum mechanics. I really didn’t want to make some dumb mistake. Even so, when my husband read the first draft, he wrote “No!” in big red letters at a number of points in the text and I had to rework several scenes to correct the errors he pointed out.

    Anyway, for better or worse, I can now say that I’ve published some science fiction. I’ve included the blurb and an excerpt below. Oh, and I should mention that Alyn and Zed, the two heroes, do wear something like silver underwear – when they’re not naked, that is – although I wasn’t thinking about the song when I wrote the tale!

    Blurb

    Love travels faster than light.

    Physicist Dr. Christine Monroe has devoted her lonely life to research on hyper-space travel.

    Her continued failure leads her to sign on to the Archimedes, a sub-light-speed mission aimed at establishing a colony in the Sirius B system. Waking from suspended animation, she discovers that the ship is wildly off course and the rest of the crew are dead due to equipment failure.

    At first she thinks the two handsome strangers who show up on the ship are figments of her imagination – erotic hallucinations created by isolation and stress. However, Alyn and Zed are solid, real, and ready to sacrifice their lives for the strong woman they’ve found stranded in deep space.

    As her ship begins to disintegrate, Christine must choose between the planet she was sent to save and the two alien beings she’s come to cherish.

    Excerpt

    The bridge was as silent as the suspension bay. However, a survey of the blinking panels and rotating 3D displays revealed that the entire ship had power. The pods had been some kind of anomaly. Relieved, Christine settled into the pilot’s chair (Sven Harlsson, gone like all the rest) and searched the cluttered controls until she found the viewport activation button. The curved shields slid open, revealing a hemisphere of blackness. For the first time, Christine gazed out into the emptiness of interstellar space.

    Terror tightened her throat. She was falling into the immense void before her, drowning in the utter absence of light or form. She closed her eyes, trying to summon the scientist within her. No one had seen this before, the vast reaches of the universe outside Earth’s solar system. She was the first.

    She forced herself to peer into the darkness, pressing against the transparent carbon-crystal of the viewport. As her vision adapted, she found she could see faint glowing clouds that must be galaxies and pinpricks of light that were distant stars. The universe was not totally empty, after all. She swallowed her fear and tried to speak.

    “Request interstellar coordinates.” Her long-unused voice came out as a croak, but Archimedes understood her command.

    “359˚ 56’ 39.5’’ galactic latitude, -2˚ 42’ 46.3’’ galactic longitude,” the ship replied crisply.

    “Request distance from Sirius cluster.”

    “Approximately thirty-four-point-seven light years.”

    “What?” That was farther away than they’d been when they started! “There must be a mistake! Recheck your calculations.”

    The ship’s computer hesitated for a fraction of a second—almost as though it were offended, Christine thought. “There is no error. Current position is 34.68643 light years from Sirius, 41.321966 light years from Terra. Current speed is .917 c. Heading is 22˚ 13’ b by 9˚ 2’ l.”

    Forty-one light years from Earth! Had they overshot their goal? Of course, a tiny miscalculation in their initial trajectory would be magnified into an increasingly large discrepancy the farther the ship travelled from its starting point. “How long has it been since departure?”

    “Four years, sixty-two days, four hours and twenty-two minutes,” the ship intoned.

    Only four years? “That’s not possible,” Christine objected. Given their maximum velocity, they could not have travelled anywhere near this far. Something was very wrong.

    “Run full self-diagnostics,” she ordered. “Report any faults.”

    The computer was silent for about ten seconds. Christine stared out of the viewport, wondering whether any of the faint, flickering points of brightness might be Sol.

    “Self-diagnostics completed,” Archimedes announced. “No faults detected.”

    Christine leaned back in the padded chair with a weary sigh. Pain pounded in her temples. Her usually nimble mind felt stiff and rusty. She had to figure this out.

    Once again, she saw Ravin’s blank, lifeless face. She had not loved him, but she had respected him, and he had given her pleasure during their pre-launch familiarisation exercises. She found that she missed him. “The crew are all dead,” she murmured to herself. “I’m the only one left, and I’m lost in space, billions of kilometres off course.”

    “All suspension pod power was terminated,” the ship commented. “A collision with unidentified debris damaged the electrical distribution cables in the hull. Backup systems failed to engage.”

    “What? How long ago did this happen?”

    “Sixty-two hours and seventeen minutes ago.” Less than three days! If she had awakened a bit sooner, she might have saved them. The impact must have triggered the reactivation sequence in her own pod. Or perhaps the backup had kicked in to handle the life support for her pod alone.

    “EVA is recommended to repair the breach,” Archimedes added. “Probability of atmospheric loss over the next twenty-four hours is point-four-six.”

    Christine collapsed on to the control panel, her face buried in her hands, squeezing her eyes tight to hold back the tears. The ship wanted her to risk her life, venturing outside to patch the hole before the air escaped. But why should she bother? She was dead one way or the other.

    The vastness of space weighed on her, even when she was not looking at it. The unending blackness threatened to smother her. She felt as empty and hollow as the universe stretching into infinity on every side.

    Bio

    A dozen years ago LISABET SARAI experienced a serendipitous fusion of her love of writing and her fascination with sex. Since then she has published three single author short story collections and six erotic novels, including the classic RAW SILK. Dozens of her shorter works have been released as ebooks and in print anthologies. She edited the acclaimed anthologies SACRED EXCHANGE and CREAM and is currently responsible for the altruistic erotica series COMING TOGETHER PRESENTS. In addition, she reviews erotica and erotic romance for the Erotica Readers and Writers Association and Erotica Revealed websites.

    Lisabet holds more degrees than anyone needs from prestigious universities who would no doubt be embarrassed by her chosen genre. She loves to travel and currently lives in Southeast Asia with her highly tolerant husband and two cosmopolitan felines. For more information on Lisabet and her writing visit Lisabet Sarai’s Fantasy Factory or her blog Beyond Romance.

  • Guest author: Claire Robyns

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    Hi Kaz, thanks for having me here today. I’m on a total buzz right now! My debut book releases on Monday [that's today for me and j-u-s-t today for Claire! --ksa] and I’m in total awe of what the Carina Press authors have achieved so far. I’ve done no writing this last month, every time I start another fabulous Carina Press book I promise myself it will be just this one and then I’ll get back to my own writing. And lol, no sooner have I finished reading and I’m off to the Carina Press e-store again. I blame all the launch authors!

    Two Feuding Families

    Amber Jardin has no taste for the bitter feud started before her father’s banishment. But now that he’s passed, she’s had to return to Scotland and his barbaric people. After her bloodthirsty uncle kidnaps one of the family’s rivals, Amber is in turn captured by Krayne Johnstone, the enemy laird. Despite their enmity, their attraction is immediate—and unfortunate, as Amber has sworn to escape.

    One Lusty Temptation

    Krayne is amazed at the wildcat’s repeated attempts to flee. He should steel himself against her beguiling ways—yet with time, he is driven more witless with lust. When the ransom exchange fails and Krayne is left with Amber, he finds he cannot tolerate the thought of her with another man—and she cannot tolerate the thought of returning to her uncle’s home.

    Will passion and love win out over mistrust and betrayal in time to prevent an all-out war?

    Betrayed ~ available from Carina Press, 5 July 2010

    There’s just something about medieval warriors that gets me feeling all toasty from the toes on up. These guys are so serious about their honour and responsibilities and there’s no law on this planet that will stand in their way if they believe vengeance is called for. Scottish lairds are the best, they were such a wayward bunch of unscrupulous thugs ~ all in the name of honour!

    I grew up in South Africa, so when my British husband suggested we move to the UK, I was totally up for it. At last, I’d get to explore the majestic castles of England, the tumbling down peel towers of Scotland and the grassy ruins of Ireland. We sat down to an authentic medieval banquet in a tiny peel castle in Ireland, lived a few miles from Warwick castle for the first 2 years and thoroughly toured Scotland from the lowlands all the way to the Isle of Skye. In no time at all my head was crammed with romantic tales and Betrayed was bursting to be told. My exploration is nowhere near done and never will be.

    Krayne Johnstone became laird of Wamphray at the age of 12. He’s a man shaped by the harsh land. His heart is for pumping blood to his sword arm and nothing else. Before he could even start to fall in love with Amber, I had to teach the poor man what love is. But he is honourable and noble, and he has excellent reasons for distrusting scheming women.

    Amber Jardin has led a pampered life in England and is totally unprepared for the barbaric realities of Scotland. But she’s not one to simper and bemoan her fate. She’s determined to shape her future and use whatever means on hand to do it. In this case, it’s her body. Amber is not perfect, far from it, but then I’ve never liked my heroines flawless. I don’t necessarily approve of everything she does, but I admire her courage and determination.

    You can read an excerpt at http://www.clairerobyns.com/Betrayed.html

    Well, it’s been fun and once again, thanks to Kaz for having me here.

    You can connect with Claire Robyns on

    Website: http://www.clairerobyns.com/

    Blog: http://www.clairerobyns.blogspot.com/

  • You know you’re a writer if…. : Dee Tenorio

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    Believe it or not, it’s not exactly a glamorous job to be a writer. I mean, sure, it’s awesome to see your name in the bookstore. Actually, that part never stops being awesome. But there’s more to writing than that.

    You see, there’s also the “crazy”.

    If you write, then you know what I mean. The strange snippets of dialogue that hit you while shopping for groceries, leaving you to scribble madly on your old receipts that you dug out of the bottom of your purse “while it’s fresh”. Or practicing how to attack a person with a kitchen blade…on your mate. Or actually driving into a ditch because you got an idea like a lightening bolt and forgot you were driving. Or, you know, sitting in a breakfast restaurant with headphones, working out the dialogue for your love scene…while the stranger next to you chokes because you said “nipple” too loud….

    The people next to us are continually shocked, where ever we go. They start to worry about us. In the “Should I call the guys with the white jackets?” kind of way. But to us…well, everything makes a great story. From the inside, it all makes sense. Random story bits and ideas don’t equate schizophrenia if you can still separate reality from the fiction you’re weaving. But it can be hard to tell.

    So, I’ve come up with a way for the non-writer to know if the slightly scary person next to them is in need of a padded room…or just a writer. :)

    1) Is the person dressed haphazardly, hair completely out of control, and muttering to themselves?

    If yes, don’t worry yet, it could just be a housewife. If no, don’t rule out a writer yet…some of us are sneaky.

    2) Is the person also slightly glassy-eyed, staring out into the middle space, their expression growing more and more excited for no seeming reason at all?

    If yes, the odds are better that you’ve happened upon a writer, but it’s not rock solid yet. If no, yup, that’s probably a housewife. Back away. Slowly. Poor woman probably needs a break.

    3) Does this person suddenly make a loud whoop of joy or shock and then start riffling through their bag or attacking a typeable electronic device?

    If yes, relax, you’ve just spotted an author. Try to catch her name so you can pick up her next book–you might be in it! If no, shhhhh. It’s probably an author and you don’t want to be the next victim in her book as the person who interrupted her greatest scene ever. :)

    Hope this brings a smile to everyone reading! Thanks Kaz for letting me play with you here!!
    Dee

    About Dee:

    Dee Tenorio has a few reality issues. After much therapy for the problem—if one can call being awakened in the night by visions of hot able-bodied men a problem—she has proved incurable. It turns out she enjoys tormenting herself by writing sizzling, steamy romances of various genres spanning paranormal mystery dramas, contemporaries and romantic comedies. Preferably starring the sexy, somewhat grumpy heroes described above and smart-mouthed heroines who have much better hair than she does.

    The best part is, no more therapy bills!

    Well, not for Dee, anyway. Her husband and kids, on the other hand…

    If you would like to learn more about Dee and her work, please visit her website at www.deetenorio.com or her blog at http://www.deetenorio.com/Blog/
    .

  • A sermon, perhaps, and a tease: Alice Gaines

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    Oh I’ve been waiting for this one. Alice Gaines is a fellow Carina Press author and a committed Episcopalian. I started the ball rolling at Alice’s blog with my little essay on morals, atheism and IN ENEMY HANDS, and here’s her reply. Enjoy!

    First, the sermon, then the tease…

    When Kaz Augustin posted as an atheist on my blog, where I discuss my faith (Episcopalian) in relation to what I write (super-steamy romance), she thought she could pick an argument. I’m going to fool her. I agree with her.

    Kaz said, “I think my biggest criticism of religious people as a whole is that they seem to regard atheists as people without morals. “ This is so true and so unfortunate. I spent decades as an agnostic, and I was no less moral then than I am now.

    My teeth would grind when people asked me “If you don’t believe in God, why do you have to behave ethically?” My answer was, “Duh. That’s what decent people do.” Think about it. If the only reason you behave yourself is that if you don’t, Someone on High will smite you, how good are you really?

    I’ll go even further than Kaz did. When did “morality” come to be equated sexual restrictions? Am I “moral” if I restrict myself to vanilla sex with my husband but cheat, steal, and tell lies about my neighbor? Hell, no. Am I immoral if my sexuality is freer and I spend my time trying to make the world a better place for everyone I meet? Hell, yes.

    To tell you the truth, God invented sex, and He didn’t mean for us to make it small or use it as a weapon against each other. I’ll be blogging about that at some point in the future.

    So, what do I get from my faith that I didn’t have as an agnostic? Eternal and omnipresent love. As an agnostic, I had all the beauty of the universe. As a Christian, I also have the love behind that beauty. And, no small part of that beauty is the physical intimacy people share with each other.

    Is there any overt Christianity in Miss Foster’s Folly? No, not at all, unless you count her wedding at the end, but even that doesn’t happen on-screen. There is plenty of love, though. Love is all around us, like air. The book is about love and sex and humor. Yes, there’s some of that, too.

    So, what is the book about? Miss Juliet Foster takes it into her head to make a sexual exploration of Europe. Her only problem…if she’s going to pretend to be a wealthy widow, she’ll need to lose her virginity first. She chooses a man who sets her on fire with no more than a kiss. Her new problem…for some reason the foolish man thinks he wants to marry her and won’t Perform the Act until after their wedding.

    David Winslow, the Marquis of Derrington, recognizes the outrageous Miss Foster as the perfect wife for him, but she won’t surrender her heart. Can he lure her into marriage by refusing to satisfy her body? Can he deny his own body that long?

    It was fun to write, and I hope it’s fun to read.

    And here’s wishing you all the best with the book, Alice! Thanks for dropping by. You’re welcome back any time.

  • Interview with Jenny Schwartz

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    Hey, Kaz, I’m here! Meeting other authors, such as your gorgeous self, has been one of the joys of publication with Carina Press. I get to hang out with the cool people :) So, bring on your questions.

    (You see how she didn’t even wait for me to introduce her? She’s like that you know.)

    KS Augustin: Ahem. Hi Jenny. What part of the world do you call home?

    Jenny Schwartz: Perth, Western Australia. For some strange reason, West Aussies are called sandgropers–don’t ask me why we’re named after an insect.

    KSA: You call yourself an “armchair socialist” and readily admit that you’re interested in politics. Are you mad?

    JS: Mad? Yup. Also passionately interested in my world. The problem is that my interest doesn’t translate into action, hence the “armchair” part of “armchair socialist”.

    KSA: So what do you read to relax? Heaven knows, reading about politics ain’t relaxing!

    JS: Anything and everything–well, not horror. I’m a coward with a vivid imagination. I’m a big fan of Patricia Briggs’ werewolves, in awe of Ilona Andrews’ kick-ass Kate Daniels and actively looking for urban fantasy newcomers. My bookshelves grown under the weight of Golden Age crime novels and contemporary mystery writers such as Margaret Maron.

    KSA: Have you “come out” about your writing to your local community or are you still in the closet?

    JS: I’m as “in the closet” as a website, blog, Facebook and Twitter accounts allow me to be ;)

    KSA: So do you own an ebook reader? Why or why not?

    JS: Not yet. Partly its money, but I’m also waiting for a consensus on the Net that a given product is “to die for”–and available in Australia.

    KSA: The Price of Freedom will come out with Carina Press on June 14. Tell us about it.

    JS: First, the cover is amazing.

    Second, there’s a danger I’ll burble on forever about how much I enjoyed writing this novella and weaving together the romantic traditions of Arabia and modern terrorist tensions. It’s romance with an edge. To stop my burbling, here’s the blurb.

    Duty will bring them together—and tear them apart!

    As a guardian angel, Mischa must protect the one man who may be able to bring about lasting peace to the Middle East. As a djinni, Rafe must fulfill the wishes of a terrorist leader. Their duties colliding, Mischa and Rafe become foes, but the heat between them is undeniable.

    When the terrorist learns that a guardian angel stands between him and his greatest wish, he orders his djinni to remove her. Taking creative license, Rafe spirits her away to his private oasis, where she will be unable to protect the peacemaker.

    Beyond their mutual desire, they find common ground in honor and loneliness. Passion quickly grows into love. But it’s soon clear to Rafe that love cannot be bound, and Mischa must be true to her life’s purpose. Even if Rafe must sacrifice his own taste of freedom to grant hers…

    KSA: And where can interested readers find you?


    JS:

    http://www.authorjennyschwartz.com/

    http://www.acquiring-magic.blogspot.com/

    http://www.facebook.com/authorjennyschwartz

    http://twitter.com/Jen2late

    Thanks, Kaz, for the nifty questions! I’ve had fun :)

    You know what, Jenny? You’re a lot funnier than this. You’ll have to come back, okay?

  • Interview with Cindy Spencer Pape

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    As I type this up, Cindy’s book, Motor City Fae, is currently on the Bestseller list at the Carina Press shop! Well done, Cindy! Onto the interview….

    KS Augustin: Cindy, when I saw the bookshelf at your site, I was struck dumb! You’ve written so many books in so many romance genres? Any of them your favourite?

    Cindy Spencer Pape: I think each one has to be a favorite while you’re writing it, or it isn’t going to be any good. I DO have a real soft spot for my Geek Love series—anyone who knows me will understand why. Motor City Fae, though is another…I truly love the paranormal world I’m building in Detroit with this series.

    KSA: What has your degrees in zoology and animal behaviour taught you about writing?

    CSP: I think having the scientific background has given me a good foundation in research and so much of the animal behaviour knowledge applies to humans as well—and tends to help make my paranormal beings a little more plausible, I think.

    KSA: What’s it like in Michigan? What’s the view like when you look out your window?

    CSP: Michigan is very much a 4-season temperate zone—hot in the summer, colourful in autumn, cold and snow in winter, and unpredictable in spring. The view out my window, alas, is that of a very generic modern subdivision. Switch around the trees and shrubs and it could be anywhere in the world. Borrrrrring!

    KSA: LOL! I see that you try to get to the occasional convention? What do you like about them? Anything you’re not so keen on?

    CSP: I love catching up with fellow authors and getting to mingle with readers, reviewers, and even publishers. I could do without the sore feet and the waiting in line.

    KSA: If you couldn’t be a writer, what would you be?

    CSP: Well, I DID do environmental education for years, and even a stint in local politics. Been a restaurant hostess, a bank teller, a college instructor, and a carpenter’s assistant, and a receptionist. Not sure what I’d try next. If I had university to do over again, though, I think I’d have studied either anthropology or library science.

    KSA: You have a novel coming out with Carina Press called MOTOR CITY FAE. What’s it about?

    CSP: <grin>MCF came out Monday, June 7, and I’m unbelievably excited about it. Here’s the blurb!

    Detroit artist Meagan Kelly has had a strong sixth sense all her life, but that doesn’t mean the gorgeous stranger’s crazy story—that she’s a half-elf, half human heiress—is true. But Meagan can’t deny the evidence of her own eyes—he’s Fae. A tall, blond, handsome, pointy-eared elf—and a man she just can’t get enough of.

    Ric Thornhill’s assignment just got a lot more complicated. The more time he spends with Meagan, the harder it is to see her as a political tool to prevent an all-out war between humans and Fae.

    Now Meagan’s in a race to master her newly released powers in time to prevent the conflict, convince a jealous Queen not to strip Ric of his powers, and find out if she can build a life that straddles two worlds.

    KSA: And you’re following it up in October with MOTOR CITY WITCH. Can you tell us a bit about that one?

    CSP: MCW comes out October 4, from Carina Press. This isn’t the official Back cover copy, but a little teaser blurb:

    When Aidan Greene meets up with his former love, Elise Sutton, he’s in for a surprise. Even though the witch insists he isn’t the father of her little girl, the Fae lord is sure the child is his. When Elise’s daughter is kidnapped, Aidan and Elise are forced to work together to rescue her, rekindling old passions, and maybe even igniting new ones.

    KSA: You’ll have readers lining up in droves!  Where can interested readers find you in the meantime?

    CSP: Website: http://www.cindyspencerpape.com

    Blog: http://cindyspencerpape.blogspot.com/

    Twitter: http://twitter.com/CindySPape

    Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/#!/profile.php?id=100000270304390

    And you can download and check out the complete first chapter of MCF at http://carinapress.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/motorcityfae_excerpt.pdf

    Thanks so much for having me here today, Kaz!

    Also, readers, don’t forget to check out Kaz’s post on my blog today!

    Finally, as part of my blog tour promoting Motor City Fae, I’m running a contest. All you have to do is pop over to my website, go to the “contact Cindy” page, and tell me which blog you saw me on and answer the question of the day. At the end of June, I’ll be giving away a $20.00 gift card to your choice of Borders, B&N, or Amazon. You can enter once for each blog stop. Today’s question is: Name the state where Cindy lives.

  • Interview with Toni Anderson

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    KS Augustin: Toni, welcome to Fusion Despatches. How did you settle on writing romantic suspense? Has this been a genre you’ve always loved or did you somehow fall into it?

    Toni Anderson: Reading-wise it is my favourite genre although I also love historical, contemporary, comedy, fantasy and futuristic…you can see a pattern here I think? :) I just love to read—mainly romances, some thrillers and lots of non-fiction. I like to write RS because I love the danger element, I love how the romance and the danger become interwoven into a complex emotional thread, both feeding the other. For me they just intensify the connection between the hero and the heroine.

    KSA: What has marine biology taught you about writing?

    TA: Funny question. :) It’s taught me a lot. Forget all the extraneous information stored in my brain, studying marine biology taught me how to construct essays and scientific papers (not to mention a thesis!) in the most basic way that I think is reflected in my writing. I think my writing style is fairly stark, not too much flowery fluff—although having a top editor like Deborah Nemeth sure helped with the fluff :) I also learned a lot about how the natural world works—how one thing links to another, how a change in one thing (say temperature or light or oil pollution!) has a knock-on effect because things don’t exist in a vacuum. Even small changes can have a huge impact on the overall system. I think the same goes for writing a book. All things are related and interconnected. You need the correct emphasis on each component of the story and when you have that, the book is in balance and the story works for the reader.

    Short answer—it taught me the importance of balance. ;)

    KSA: You’re in Brittany even as I ask this. How did you get from Canada to France? And can I tag along next time?

    TA: LOL—yes, I was! I’m waaaaayyyyyy past Brittany now. ; Past Normandy, England, Scotland and England again and hopefully now dipping my toes in the Pacific Ocean off the west coast of Vancouver island—not home but at least in the right country!

    My husband is a Biology Professor at the University of Manitoba and had a 6 month sabbatical. Not wanting to be parted while he’s busy in the lab, the children and I followed him around like 3 sneaky shadows. :) They went into a French school and I stayed home writing. It was a perfect situation and I’ll treasure the memories forever. I’ll let you know where we go next time, Kaz ;)

    KSA: I’ll hold you to that. Anything you’d like to relate in the “culture shock” department?

    TA: No massive culture shock except for the kids. The teachers in France yell big time–none of this PC business. My kids were therefore model students LOL! I’ve never travelled to anywhere that different to my native Britain or adopted Canada. Australia is very similar to the UK except the spiders and snakes and hot weather. :) The landscape in France was just like the UK (Brittany in France is the reason we have Great Britain as opposed to just plain old Britain). I’d love to explore Russia or Egypt—that would be a welcome culture shock!!

    KSA: I love your blog. You have such beautiful photos on it. You’re also a keen photographer, right?

    TA: Thanks!! I am a keen photographer but I only have a little point and shoot camera. I think what I am really is a frustrated painter. I love to paint but rarely have the time. But I’m very visual.

    KSA: So you have a novel coming out with Carina Press on 14th June… What’s it about?

    TA: It’s a story of murder and revenge set on the brooding Scottish coast. Here’s the blurb…

    SEA OF SUSPICION

    Marine biologist Susie Cooper traded her life in America for a dream job on the rugged Scottish coast. Now all she lacks is the right man to start a family with. After their first meeting, she knows sexy Detective Inspector Nick Archer isn’t what she’s looking for. He’s the type of guy whose idea of commitment is staying the whole night.

    Nick has returned to St. Andrews for one reason only—to fulfill his vow to find his wife’s killer. Relentless in his twelve-year quest for justice, he has no problem using Susie to get close to his primary suspect: her boss. But the passion between them smolders, and as it ignites, Nick finds himself torn between his past and his present—with Susie.

    When one of her boss’s students is murdered, Nick’s investigation draws Susie into a web of madness and betrayal. They will have to learn to trust each other if they’re going to catch a killer…and come out of this alive.

    KSA: Wow, great plot! Where can interested readers find you?

    TA: Short answer…everywhere! My website… http://tonianderson.shawwebspace.ca

    I’ve set up a fan page for SEA OF SUSPICION with location photographs and anecdotes. I’d love to hear what readers think. My first Romantic Suspense, HER SANCTUARY, was released in 2009 to some great reviews. I love to hear from people and I write about my travels on my blog and update on Twitter. Readers can sign up for my newsletter on my website, or friend me on Facebook.

  • Guest author: Joely Sue Burkhart

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    And we start off the Carina Press authors’ blog tour with a bang … and Joely Sue Burkhart!

    I’ve always loved the idea of blood sacrifice. From vampires to communion, I’m fascinated by the inherent power in this essence of life. Add mythology to the mix, and I’m one happy camper, so of course, the Maya have always been one of my favorites mythologies. Bonus: pyramids!

    One of my inspirations for THE BLOODGATE GUARDIAN is a demotivator poster depicting the famous El Castillo pyramid of Chich’en Itza that says “All we ask here is that you give us your heart.” While there’s no archeological evidence that the Maya sacrificed hundreds or thousands of victims until the pyramid steps ran red with blood as in Mel Gibson’s Apocalytpo, they did practice blood sacrifice. Most of the time, they cut their ears or (men, avert your eyes and cover yourself) penis, caught blood on special paper, and then burned it with incense to honor the gods.

    Yes, occasionally people were sacrificed, especially the losers of the famous ballgame or captured kings from other villages. Sometimes people were simply tossed into the cenotes—large sinkholes that form over thousands of years in the limestone, often with an extensive network of caves. If they were still alive hours later…or possibly the next day…then they might be rescued to see if they bore any messages from the gods. (Which is where the main Bloodgate idea came from!)

    Sadly, children were often the victims of this type of sacrifice, inspiring a short story that I’m offering for free on my website, Well of Sky.

    Most of the time, it was the willing sacrifice—of his own blood—that imbued so much power into the priest’s prayers and rituals. Ruin, the hero in THE BLOODGATE GUARDIAN, has paid that price numerous times himself. In fact, he’s died many times in service to the Bloodgates. He willingly pays the ultimate price over and over to protect that sacred magic.

    When this man falls in love, he falls hard. How many times will he die to keep her alive?

    Mini Excerpt:

    He drew the knife. Immediately, her gaze focused on it. The startled flare of her eyes and quickening of her breath told him she still wasn’t comfortable with sacrifice, despite what she’d done for him last night. “Magic has a cost. I pay the cost myself as often as possible, but some magic can only be wrought with great sacrifice.”

    Did you…” She swallowed hard and her face paled. She jerked her gaze away from the knife up to his face. “Did you ever sacrifice a human?”

    He kept his face smooth. “You know the answer to that question.”

    A shudder wracked her shoulders, but she didn’t pull away.

    The tales of your time greatly exaggerate the role and act of human sacrifice by my people. Did we sacrifice people? Yes. But never mass slaughters where the steps of the pyramid ran red with blood. We have no mass graves. We never decimated an entire tribe by slaughtering every living being.”

    How many?” Her voice was raw, ragged, her hands fisted at her sides. The pale tightness on her face made him want to snarl.

    We fought wars. We captured our enemy. We gave them the honor of fighting in the ballgame. The losers were often sacrificed. Great kings, too, were often sacrificed, and they went willingly to save their people. What great sacrifice have you made? How would you save your people?”

    You killed people,” she whispered, backing away as though she stared at an abomination. “Did you kill someone to resurrect your brother?”

    Grimly, he drew the knife across his palm, deeper than he intended in his fury. “Of course not. That price I paid with my own blood.”

    Read Chapter One.

    Joely Sue Burkhart

    Website & Blog

    Twitter

  • Guest author: Ann Wilkes – Recycling Storylines Well

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    First, I want to thank Kaz for being such a great host and a frequent commenter on my blog. And for suggesting this blog post swap. She might even invite me back to talk about flash fiction. For now, let’s talk about recycling.

    Human nature hasn’t changed much since man discovered fire or Cain killed Abel. People still have the same motivations. Man kills, steals or lies for land and money. The material things we fight over have changed, but the base motivations and plots have not. Our lives have grown more complex because of our possessions, but our motivations at their core are just as simple.

    We’ve heard or read all the stories before. There is nothing new. That’s why writers recycle.

    Recycling, in writing, is just as honorable as going green — if done well.

    Many reading this have seen or at least heard a lot about Avatar, so I’m going to use it as an example. Avatar is the best movie I’ve seen since the first Star Wars movie came out in the 70s. I removed my 3D glasses and emerged from the showing feeling like I had not just gone to a movie. I had experienced something unique and amazing and I wanted to do it again. (And I did.)

    The storyline is as well worn as a threadbare pair of jeans, but enough elements were put together in unique ways, with enough cool trappings that it didn’t bother me. But, most of all, the heights in CGI that the James Cameron event reached and the emotional ties to the Trail of Tears, made its basic unoriginality not matter to me.

    In Avatar, people with stronger weapons and bigger egos, discover what they perceive to be an under-developed sentient species and take what they want from them with no regard for their lives, treating them like dumb animals. How familiar is that? Columbus or the early Americans were far from the first to do this. Remember Cain and Abel. And it still goes on in many parts of the world today. Ethnic cleansing, genocide.

    >SPOILER ALERT<

    In the end protagonist Jake Sully goes native. It’s so commonplace that we even have a term for it.

    >END SPOILER ALERT<

    Window dressing like blue skin, FTL (faster than light) spacecraft and floating mountains in the sky are how the writer dresses up humans and humanoids in stories that we’ve seen or read a thousand times. The writer must also combine story elements in unique, if not better, ways than we’ve seen before.

    I just reviewed Pride and Prejudice and Zombies: Dawn of the Dreadfuls. Talk about recycling! Hockensmith begins with Jane Austin’s characters and setting and adds zombies and ramps up the humor. It was great! I also have Android Karenina by (Leo Tolstoy and) Ben H. Winters waiting in my TBR pile. They’re both Quirk Classics. I think Quirk is onto something with these literary mash-ups; may Tolstoy and Austin still rest in peace. They work because they are putting two disparate themes together and having fun with it.

    Some storylines were never meant to be recycled — especially not so obviously and unimaginatively. How many animals, insects, people or >wince< vegetables must we endure being mutated by into huge, man-eating menaces? Someone please convince the SyFy channel we’ve had enough!

    And don’t get me started on the disaster movies that throw the bitter exes together to save the day.

    I would love to give you some specific literary examples, but I’m coming up empty at the moment. I suspect I’ve never finished, quickly forgotten and disposed of the books I started that fell in this category.

    The same is true of short stories. I know I’ve seen a lot of bad recycling in first contact stories, Pinocchio-like robot stories and military science fiction. And let’s not forget the Ender’s Game wannabes.

    There have been times when I’ve read a major sci-fi magazine cover to cover and found it utterly forgettable; none of the stories surprising me. When I interviewed Wendy S. Delmater, editor of Abyss and Apex, she reiterated what she had said to me at World Fantasy last year. What she wants most in a story is to be surprised.

    Ann Wilkes’ first book, Awesome Lavratt, is a tongue-in-cheek space opera with mind control, passion and adventure. And it’s also available as a book app for iPhone, iPad and iPod Touch. Her stories have appeared in magazines and anthologies. She also maintains the Science Fiction and Other ODDysseys blog and reviews sci-fi for Mostly Fiction. She lives in California’s wine country with her husband, Patrick, son Daniel, a cat and two dogs. Visit her at www.annwilkes.com.

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