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Archive for May, 2008



Friday, May 16th, 2008
New Review for Wild Hunt…

One week until release day! Can you believe it? I’m really not prepared. I didn’t even send the book to hardly any reviewers this time. I did, however, send it to Amelia Richard at CataRomance and her review is up. Here’s the key bit…

With imagination and cleverness, Lori Devoti gives readers what they crave in a paranormal story. The premise of her Unbound series is completely unique, and the featured characters are very individualistic in every aspect of their nature. Ms. Devoti gives her characters distinctive personalities and the thoughts of each being are vividly shown, particularly the differences between those with the same heritage. With the vast number of different beings in this story, the author’s gift for creativity shines through when the way they think and react is expressed. The plot of WILD HUNT is masterfully carried out as each second brings forth a new revelation, many of them surprising and unforeseen. There was not a moment when I was not held ensnared by the happenings in the story, as each one became more significant in what would ultimately come to pass in the lives of Venge and Geysa. This couple, with their differences in not only genetic makeup but also their goals, is powerfully portrayed with intense passions and strong wills. When their temperaments clash, the scenes are filled with genuine emotions and inner conflicts. Ms. Devoti gives these two a myriad of dilemmas to overcome, and Venge and Geysa prove their true natures time and again. WILD HUNT is a mesmerizing love story, one where potent feelings and danger constantly collide.

You can read the full review here…Oh, and she gave it 5 stars. :)

Thursday, May 15th, 2008
On book promotion…

Wednesday, May 14th, 2008
Interview with Nocturne author, Pamela Palmer

Pamela Palmer, dark paranormal author

Pam and I both have June releases for Nocturne! This is Pam’s second book for the line. Her first was The Dark Gate, which received all kinds of acclaim. If you’re heading to the stores to get Wild Hunt, you’ll want to pick up Dark Deceiver too.

Author of: The Esri series for Silhouette Nocturne (The Dark Gate, and Dark Deceiver available May 23, right now at eHarlequin)

Favorite Candy: Peppermint Patties

Favorite Cartoon Character: Disney’s Kim Possible. She’s a quick-thinking teenage crime-fighter who always gets her bad guy.

Super Power Most Covets: The ability to fly!

Q.) Dark Deceiver, your June 2008 Nocturne is the second in your Esri series. Can you tell us about the series? How about Dark Deceiver in particular?

P.P.) In the Esri series, I pose the question, “What if an ancient, forgotten evil found its way back into our world?” The key is, this is our world. In The Dark Gate, book 1, the hero and heroine don’t believe in the existence of other-worldly creatures any more than most people we know. At least, not until they’re faced with irrefutable evidence to the contrary.

Dark Deceiver, paranormal romance, NocturneIn book 2, Dark Deceiver, an Esri, Kaderil the Dark, is sent to infiltrate and destroy the small band of humans immune to Esri enchantment. Kaderil has human blood and looks human which has always made him something of an outcast in his own world. He’s determined to prove his worth to his king by succeeding in this mission…until he falls in love with the human, Autumn McGinn.

Q.) Where did you get the idea for the Esri?

P.P.) I was researching Scottish fairy lore for a different project and discovered the Scots didn’t think of fairies and elves as our modern culture portrays them (as tiny winged creatures). They believed them to be human-like, man-sized, and malicious. They were terrified of them and blamed them for all kinds of misfortune. If a child got sick, they believed the fairies had exchanged it for one of their own (a changeling). Knowing how stories take on a life of their own, I began to wonder what if there really were fairies at one time, big malicious ones like the Scots believed in. Creatures that were locked out of our world for centuries. And what if they found their way back?

Q.) What in your own background do you think drew you to writing dark paranormal romance?

P.P.) I’ve always been drawn to sci-fi/fantasy television and movies (Star Trek, Lord of the Rings, Buffy), but I read romance and, oddly, tend to dream action/adventures when I sleep at night. Dark paranormal romance is a wonderful blend of the three. Tense, romantic, exciting, and otherworldly.

Q.) You also have some single title books under contract. Can you tell us a bit about them? When will we see them?

P.P.) Thank you for asking about them, Lori! Yes, I recently sold a contemporary dark paranormal series to Avon Books and a time travel series to Berkley. I’ll be writing the Avon books as Pamela Palmer and the Berkley books as Pamela Montgomerie. With so many books coming out around the same time from three publishers, my various editors requested I take a second name. So I did.

The series for Avon is the Feral Warriors, a band of nine shape-shifters, each of whom is the last of his ancient line to retain the power of his animal. Each shifts into a different animal and goes by the name of his beast. The first book is Lion’s. In it, the Ferals have lost the one woman, the radiant, through whom they access their power. The old radiant has died and the new one, who should have come forward as soon as she was marked, hasn’t. Lion, the finder, finally locates the woman and discovers she’s half way across the country. He goes to get her to bring her back only to discover she not only doesn’t know she’s been marked as the radiant, she thinks she’s human. Lion’s book is tentatively scheduled for a summer 2009 release, with Tiger and Panther’s books coming later.

The first book in my time travel series for Berkley is SAPPHIRE DREAM, slated for an August 2009 release. A modern woman wakes up aboard a seventeenth century pirate ship only to realize the Scots captain knows exactly who she is.

Q.) Are you a plotter or a pantser? Character-driven or plot driven? Ever try to be the opposite? Do you have a set method you use when starting a book?

P.P.) I used to think I was a total plotter, but I’ve found I’m something of a hybrid. I start out with a loose plot (what the book’s about, the major turning points, and the character arcs), then I start writing. No matter how much plotting I do up front, I learn most of the story by writing, so I’ve stopped wasting so much time on the front end with plots that don’t end up being right. My first drafts tend to be exploratory drafts. I often say (and it’s usually true) that my first draft always winds up being the story I DON’T want to tell. I tend to throw out most of it and start over once I’ve figured out the story I DO want.

As for character vs. plot driven, I’m probably a hybrid here, too. I brainstorm plots and characters simultaneously when I’m coming up with a new story. Sometimes I’ll have an idea for one before the other, but I very much work them through together because plot and character are so intimately woven in the story.

Q.) What is the smartest thing you’ve done so far as advancing either your writing or your writing career? What is something you wish you had done differently?

P.P.) The smartest thing I’ve done is learn everything I can about the craft of writing. I’m still learning and probably always will be, but the more I learn, the better able I am to tell the stories I want to tell, the way I want to tell them. That seems obvious, but when I first started writing, I didn’t have a clue about story structure. All I could do was wing it, and not very successfully. I’ve taken dozens of on-line classes through the various RWA chapters, read dozens of how-to books on writing, script writing, characterization, etc. And I’ve attended numerous conferences over the years, filled with workshops. Each time I learn something new, I consider it another tool for my toolbox. If I’m having trouble figuring out a manuscript (or revising one), I pull out my toolbox and tinker until I figure out what the problem is and come up with a way to fix it.

Q.) What can readers expect to find in all your books no matter the series?

The Dark Gate, paranormal romance, Nocturne

P.P.) High stakes, high action, lots of romance and, I hope, a sense of truth. By that last I mean that no matter how incredible the situation I throw my characters into, they act believably. They react the way you or I would were we to find ourselves in the midst of nine gorgeous shape-shifters and an evil witch, or suddenly facing a shipload of lecherous pirates. Or, at least, the way we’d hope we would.

Q.) Who do you enjoy reading? If someone were to compare your books to anyone else’s what author would you most like to be compared to? Why?

P.P.) In addition to the Nocturne authors, my current favorite dark paranormal romance writers are J.R. Ward, Nalini Singh, and Kresley Cole. My favorite time travel author is the incomparable Diana Gabaldon. As for comparisons, I would love my work to be favorably compared to any of these writers’, because they’re all wonderful and incredibly talented.

Q.) Where can readers find you on the web?

P.P.) I can be found at www.pamelapalmer.net.

Tuesday, May 13th, 2008
News from Iraq, 35th Engineer Brigade, Special Photo Edition

“THE MULESKINNER” is a publication focused on the Soldiers of the 35th Engineer Brigade (a.k.a. Muleskinners) and its engineer mission while deployed to Iraq in Support of Operation Iraqi Freedom.

Here’s Special Photo Issue. FYI: My cousin is pictured on page 4 walking under the tail of a plane and carrying a briefcase. :)

Note: I think this will be my last issue. I hope you enjoyed reading the MULESKINNER!

Monday, May 12th, 2008
Blogging over at Shapeshifter romance today…

I’m talking about shapeshifters who use some kind of magic, a tool, spell, etc. to shift and how they are different from shapeshifters who just ARE shapeshifters…

Tuesday, May 6th, 2008
Interview Tate Hallaway, paranormal romance author

Tate Hallaway, paranormal romance authorBasic Facts: Born in November of 1967 in Sacramento, California; grew up in LaCrosse, Wisconsin, and is currently drifting back westward as she lives in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Is mother (ima) of Mason, a four-and-a-half year old charmer who knows the difference between ptyerglotis and megarachne (and the periods in which they lived!), five cats, and eight fish.
Author of: Tall, Dark & Dead, Dead Sexy, and Romancing the Dead. (Also: Archangel Protocol, Fallen Host, Messiah Node and Apocalypse Array.)
Favorite Candy: Dove Promises. Chocolate = yummy, and I’m amused by the silly little inspirational messages, ala “Send a Love Letter Today!”
Favorite Cartoon Character: Hobbes (although sometimes Susie Derkins) of Calvin & Hobbes.
Super Power Most Covets: 12 inch adamantine claws – they’d make good letter openers and all around defense, especially with all the cats in the house.

Q.) Your new release, Romancing the Dead, is part of a series. Can you tell us about this book and some background on the series? (Are the books light, dark, spicy, not so spicy, all the dirt…)

T.H.) Garnet, the heroine of the books, is a Witch living in Madison, Wisconsin. The books are light and humorous, but there’s some undertones of dark – as Garnet harbors the goddess Lilith who has a bit of a murderous streak, and when the books begin Garnet is on the run from modern-day Inquisition witch hunters.
Romancing the Dead, paranormal romance

Q.) In addition to writing paranormal romances as Tate Hallaway, you also write science fiction as Lyda Morehouse. Why the two names? Why science fiction? Why romance? And why not scifi romance?

T.H.) The two names have a couple reasons – the first of which is the idea of “branding.” Branding is a business buzzword that’s been kicking around advertising for some time and which now many authors (and their publishers) are adopting. The idea is that a company sells the consumer the entire brand (rather than each individual product) and instills a sense of brand loyalty. You love Green Giant’s big belly laugh and sexy green physique so much, you’re compelled not only buy his carrots, but also the green beans, the peas, etc.

Thus, the name Lyda Morehouse is supposed to invoke a certain kind of book: edgy, cyberpunk, religious science fiction. Tate Hallaway equals kicky, fun, chick-litty paranormal romance.

Never the twain shall meet.

As for why I write the genres I do, well, I love a good romance. If you picked up my earlier scifi books you’d notice that as well, as there’s a strong romantic element in all the books (plus the main character of Archangel Protocol is a closet romance reader, which I was at the time. I’m happy to say I’m out of the closet now.)

Science fiction was my first love. I fell for it after seeing Star Wars, I suspect. After that I was all about being a space pirate. And I have the outline for a science fiction romance, but I haven’t found the time to write it.

Q.) How long have you been writing? Which came first (in the published world) Tate or Lyda?

T.H.) Lyda came first. She died (book speaking, anway), and then Tate rose from her ashes. Which leads into the second reason that I have two names: my first set of books didn’t sell as well as the publisher hoped they would. The AngeLINK series, as they’re called, got a lot of critical acclaim, which is to say they’ve won several awards (most notably the Shamus and the Philip K. Dick Special Citation for Excellence), but they just didn’t become break-out bestsellers we all hoped for.

Q.) Actually some might call your paranormal romances, urban fantasy. Which do you think of the series as? What do you think the difference between the two is?

T.H.) I noticed that ROMANCING THE DEAD was labeled an urban fantasy by Bookclub/Romantic Times. I think that’s the sexier label, the one that’s getting all the good buzz, but I envisioned the Garnet series as paranormal romance. The difference, for me, at least, is that in my books the relationship is the center of the story. That makes it a romance.

Q.) Are you a plotter or a panster? Character-driven or plot driven? Ever try to be the opposite? Do you have a set method you use when starting a book?

T.H.) These days I sell my books on proposal, so I’ve written down the plot bones in a synopsis. But once I actually start writing the book I tend to let the characters lead the way, so much so sometimes I’ve gotten lost and have had to go back and do a boatload of revision.

Q.) What can readers expect to find in all your books no matter the name on the cover?

T.H.) Humor. Irreverence.

Q.) Who are your favorite authors and/or books?

T.H.) Rachel Caine, who writes the Weather Warden series, and Kristine Katheryn Rusch who writes the Disappeared series, a kind of futuristic police procedural on the Mars.

Q.) What is the best thing about being a published author? What is the worst?

T.H.) I’ll admit it. I LOVE seeing my name in print. And, seeing myself on the shelf next to favorite authors? There’s nothing more awesome in the whole world. The worst part is working to deadline, and having to be creative on a schedule. You know, some days I’d rather play video games than write… or write something else.

Q.) Any new projects on the horizon? What would you like to try next?

T.H.) Some day I’d like to write that futuristic romance. I’m also hoping to go back to the world of Lyda Morehouse’s AngeLINK books some day.

Q.) Finally, where can readers find you on the web? How about your books-where can they buy them?

T.H.) You can buy Tate’s novels anywhere fine books are sold. Amazon has them, of course, as well. Lyda’s books are somewhat more difficult to track down. Amazon has a few used, but you can still buy them from Uncle Hugo’s or email: UncleHugo@aol.com. You can also order on-line from Dreamhaven Books.

I’m all over the web otherwise. Tate blogs alone and as part of her writers’ group’s blog, she’s also a member of Fangs, Fur & Fey a LiveJournal community for readers and writers of urban fantasy/paranormal romance. You can also friend her on MySpace and FaceBook. Of course, there’s also http://www.tatehallaway.com.

Lyda blogs separately on LiveJournal , and on Wyrdsmiths, and also has separate MySpace and Facebook pages. Lyda also contributes to SF Novelist’s blog. I also have a website at: http://www.lydamorehouse.com.

Monday, May 5th, 2008
For everyone ready for the election already…

Sunday, May 4th, 2008
Stardust the movie and the book

I watched Stardust last night with my daughter. I’d read the book some time ago and enjoyed it, but I think I liked the movie just a tad more.
Stardust by Neil Gaiman

As I’m watching, I can’t help but analyze the structure of the story. It’s fairly simple, even though the book felt somewhat complicated. Basically, there is something (the star) that three people/beings are seeking. None of them for particularly altruistic reasons–not even the hero. In fact, in the book I remember being annoyed with Tristan for being somewhat of an ass for only seeing our star as something to acquire, and not of any value just on her own. You could do some major tie backs here to how women were seen for centuries, but let’s skip that. :)

So, one thing I loved about the move was how they extracted the key points and really showed the strengths of the book, without losing any of the story.
Stardust

In both what I loved were flashes of myth–like the goddess (witch) triad and the cart being pulled by goats. And parts reminded me of an O Henry short story too–the feel you get when reading O Henry as if you’re not quite on even ground.

Anyway, I highly recommend the movie, but I would read the book first. I think it’s almost always better to read the book first. :)

Friday, May 2nd, 2008
Another Nocturne author sells to Juno…

Lisa Renee Jones, author

I thought this was cool. Lisa Renee Jones, author of The Knights in White Satin series for Silhouette Nocturne, has sold an urban fantasy to Juno Books. Let’s see, what other Nocturne author just did that…?

Her book for Juno involves portals, demons, and evil spirits. Here’s a write up…
Sending evil spirits and demons back to where they came from is all in a day’s work for Samantha Beast of Desire, dark paranormal romanceYardell. As one of the seven chosen Guardians, she uses her immense powers to keep portals in our world closed tight against the Dark World beyond. But when an evil wizard sets out to rule both the living and the dead, she must trust Damion Montez, a lethally charming shape-shifter who is heir to the Black Tiger throne. Damion’s revelations lead Samantha into a web of passion and intrigue and on a path that will lead either to the world’s salvation or its doom.
Read the full news at Juno’s blog…

Friday, May 2nd, 2008
Orson Scott Card weighs in with his opinion of the Harry Potter/Lexicon suit…

Let’s just say he doesn’t mince words….

In general I agree with him that the case is without merit and a little unsettling, but I don’t agree that…

People who hear about this suit will have a sour taste in their mouth about Rowling from now on. Her Cinderella story once charmed us. Her greedy evil-witch behavior now disgusts us. And her next book will be perceived as the work of that evil witch.

I read most of the books and liked the first ones. But J.K seems to have a glow about her for most readers that I don’t quite get, and I don’t think her fans will see this at all as Orson Scott Card believes.