8.10.2014
Just Romantic Suspense: Take My Breath Away Heroes
Just Romantic Suspense: Take My Breath Away Heroes: With: Denise Moncrief For me, romantic suspense is all about the take-my-breath-away moments. The best of the genre builds until two p...
8.04.2014
Do You Believe In Ghosts?
The paranormal fascinates and scares me at the same time.
Because I don’t understand it, I am reluctant to get too close to it. Like a
snake that might bite. I’m fascinated with shows like Ghost Hunters and Ghost
Adventures. Yes, I realize those shows are probably so far from reality and
heavily scripted that it’s unreal, yet the thought of someone communicating
from beyond death intrigues me. If any of the claims on Ghost Adventures are real, then I suspect Zak Bagans got a little
too close and is now dealing with the consequences of messing with something he
didn’t understand. He claims an evil entity followed him home from one of his
investigations. If that can happen, then I don’t want to get anywhere near an
evil entity and I certainly don’t want to provoke it.
For the record, I don’t believe in ghosts or apparitions as
popularly defined. I don’t believe that a soul is somehow stuck between heaven
and earth, restless until he or she finds a way to move on. Okay, I know I
probably just offended someone, somewhere, but please allow me a moment to
explain. I believe there is a supernatural realm where things happen that we
normally can’t see, hear, touch, taste, or smell. A barrier or veil keeps us
humans from seeing into that realm. If we could experience everything that
happens there, I don’t think our human minds could absorb the overload of
stimuli.
Yes, I believe there is a higher power that I call God, and I think
sometimes He allows the veil to part so an individual can see more than he or
she would normally see, and when that happens, the person experiences something
paranormal that simply cannot be explained by human definitions of normal. We
humans have tried to explain the supernatural or the paranormal with our
limited understanding, because we like to explain everything and we are
arrogant enough to think we can.
Recently, I asked my friends on Facebook if they believed in
ghosts and if any of them would mind sharing their experiences with me. Many
replied in the comments to the status, and a few replied by private chat. I
promised I wouldn’t relate their stories unless they gave me specific
permission, so I won’t give details here. What surprised me was how many people
in my small group of friends had had an experience and how similar so many of
those experiences were.
Many people have lost a loved one, sometimes unexpectedly, and
experienced the peace of having their loved one communicate with them from
beyond death. I have no doubt these experiences are real. There were too many
to deny. Can a loved one communicate from beyond death? Why not? If a higher
power can pull back the veil of the supernatural, why can’t He also allow
someone’s loved one to break through the veil to give the person left behind
some comfort? Many people who experienced this felt great comfort from being
visited by the person he or she loved so dearly and missed so much.
Are there other paranormal experiences that can’t be explained?
Certainly, and although it helps us humans to define the experiences, I’m not
still not convinced the paranormal can be explained by the popular definition
of ghosts. I still believe the unexplained is simply that: unexplained.
My own experience? When I was first married, I lived with my
husband in a ground-floor apartment with a sliding glass door that faced the
parking lot. He often worked the night shift and I of course worked days, so
there were many times I would go to sleep alone in the apartment. Countless
times I would wake up and find several people I had never seen before floating
above the footboard of my bed dressed in the clothing of the late 1800s. They
never spoke, but I knew somehow they were my ancestors and they were watching
over me because I had never lived on my own and sleeping in the apartment by
myself terrified me. Once I knew they were there, I would fall back to sleep,
comforted that I was being guarded. Can I explain this experience in rational
terms? No. Do I believe I wasn’t dreaming? Yes. I experienced this many times,
the experiences stopped when we moved to a second floor apartment, and I’ve
never experienced anything like it again.
So do I believe in ghosts? Not really. Do I believe things
happen that can’t be explained? Yes. And even though, I don’t believe in ghosts
per se, I still find it fascinating to read about the paranormal and fun to
write ghost stories.
7.26.2014
Do I Have a Criminal Mind?
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Photo courtesy of Wiki Commons from the public domain. |
Why am I fascinated with serial killers? I don’t
know. You know, I’d never heard of the BTK killer until I researched serial
killers several years ago. The story got to me so much that I stopped doing
what I was doing that night and prayed the killer would get caught. The next
day they arrested the guy. After years of looking for him. Was there a
connection between my prayer and his arrest? I don’t know. Maybe. Maybe not.
Maybe it was just his time to get caught. Or maybe, like they say, God works in
mysterious ways. Whatever the case, I’m glad the killer is locked up.
Real life is a lot different from a television
show or a novel. Real people died at the hands of BTK. Real people lost loved
ones. Fiction is a lot easier to handle. You can distance yourself from the
horror of it by telling yourself it’s not real. Sometimes. One of my favorite
shows is Criminal Minds. Every
episode is about a serial killer or a spree killer. Yesterday, I watched
several episodes back to back. I had to stop watching after a while, because
that much twisted stuff can get to me. After a few episodes, I started
wondering if that kind of stuff can really happen. And then I thought about
BTK.
They caught that guy through his computer.
Imagine. What would my computer say about me? If a forensic computer geek were
to check my Google history, he or she might find some interesting searches. In
my quest to add a bit of authenticity to my writing, I’ve asked some questions
that might look...I don’t know...questionable. I’m no criminal mind. The
thought of hurting another living thing makes me cringe. But certainly my
Google searches might appear a bit...criminal. Here are a few examples:
1.
Has anyone ever hid a meth lab in a cave?
2.
How does one fire a gun properly?
3.
How can you tell someone has been in prison by their
body language or mannerisms?
4.
How long does one stay in prison for possession of meth
with intent to distribute?
5.
How long does it take for a body to completely
decompose?
6.
How does one acquire a permit to carry a gun in
Arkansas?
7.
How long does a body stay in the water before it floats
to the surface?
8.
How long before the tracks of someone’s drug addiction
disappears?
Of course, my obsession with serial killers might arouse
suspicion. Then, there’s my frequent searches for abandoned buildings in
various locales. Or my search of the various canals in New Orleans. Whatever do
I intend to do with this information? The searches for how different drugs
interact with each other doesn’t look good for me either.
So here’s my disclaimer. I’m a writer. I research weird
stuff. That’s what I do.
7.24.2014
#CoverReveal - Dangled Carat by Hilary Grossman
New Cover!
For every girl who wondered if she should love him or dump him.....
For every girl who listened to her heart instead of her friends advice....
For every girl who l wondered if she was wasting her time dating that guy....
meet Hilary....
She had gotten used to dating the commitment-phobic Marc, thirteen years her senior. They had a great relationship--why rush into things? She saw no need to pressure him for marriage, believing that when the time was right, he would propose. But after they had been together for four years, their friends decided to take matters into their own hands, pushing Marc to propose and making Hilary realize how much she really did want to marry the man that she loved. Unfortunately, Marc still wasn't ready--and their friends' meddling in the form of a faux engagement party led to a disastrous New Year's Eve that brought their relationship to an inevitable turning point.
For anyone who has ever dated a commitment-phobe, who has found their patience wearing thin with the one they love, or who has sat around wondering if he is ever going to pop the question while trying to remain the very picture of patience and grace, Hilary's humorous and honest story will hit home.
"Dangled Carat sparkles with humor and shines with wisdom. It is a gem of a book." - Christina Baker Kline - New York Times Best Selling Author of Orphan Train.
"Fans of Sex and the City - Grossman makes a reference to Carrie Bradshaw and Mr. Big - will enjoy the story, but its real-girl charm should draw an even wider crowd." - Kirkus Reviews.
Ebook $2.99, Paperback $9.93
Hilary Grossman dated a guy so commitment-phobic that she was able to write a book about their relationship. She has an unhealthy addiction to denim and shoes. She loves to find humor in every day life. And she likens life to a game of dodgeball - she tries to keep many balls in the air before they smack her in the face. When she isn't writing or blogging she is the CFO of a beverage alcohol importer. She lives on Long Island.
7.19.2014
Ten Things That Make a Reader Cringe
Before I was a published writer and an acquisitions editor, I
was a reader. I began reading romances when I was in high school. My friend
Brenda and I traded books and read every Harlequin we could get hour hands on.
I’m not going to tell you how long ago that was.
Over the years, I’ve collected some reading pet peeves. The
editor in me can spot them in someone else’s work with ease. Unfortunately, I can
get so close to my stories that sometimes I don’t see these flaws in my own writing...until
a reader points them out to me, and then I want to bang my head against a wall
because I know better.
So here they are...the top ten things that make me cringe as a
reader and a writer.
10. When paragraphs are
too long to fit on my eReader page – Even though I still LOVE the feel and
smell of a real paperback in my hands, I’ve gone digital. When the paragraph
fills the page without giving me a breather, I start skimming.
9. When the author goes
on a tangent in the middle of an intense scene – When the story gets to the
point where something important is about to happen, I don’t want the author to tell
me the backstory or what the characters are wearing, set the scene, or discuss
the weather.
8. When the author
treats you like you’re stupid by over explaining – When an author tries to
impress me how smart she is, I tune her out. If I think the writer is
condescending to me as a reader, I’ll stop reading.
7. When the author
dwells too much on an insignificant character – If the author tells me what
the character looks like, what she thinks, where she came from, and what her
cat’s name is, I expect that character to have an impact on the plot.
6. Missing scene
transitions – It slows the story and lessens my enjoyment when I have to
figure out how long it’s been since the last scene ended. I don’t want to
struggle to understand what’s going on and when it’s happening. It makes a
difference whether two hours, two days, or two years have passed.
5. Frequent typos and
obvious grammatical errors – When errors are too frequent, I stop and try
to refocus every time I come across an error. Too many stops and I’m going to
close my eReader and watch something on Netflix.
4. Switching points of
view too frequently – I can’t connect with the character when I’ve just
gotten used to being inside her head and the point of view switches to another
character. I can only handle being inside one person’s head at a time.
3. When characters
obviously act out of character – Characters should change and grow over the
course of a story, but even then, they should act and sound like the
personality that’s been created for them. A forty-year-old man should not act
or sound like a twenty-something woman unless it’s obvious he’s trying to be
funny.
2. When the ending feels
rushed – It leaves me unsatisfied when I’ve gotten used to the pace of a
book and it ends too soon, as if the writer just wants to get the story over
with. Maybe I want the plot to unravel at the pace I’ve gotten used to.
My number one pet peeve as a reader?
1. Unrealistic dialogue –
I cringe when the writer tries to give me an information dump in dialogue.
When one character tells another character what she is wearing or how someone
is related to her, I nearly fall on the floor.
When I see these things in a book, it makes me want to turn on
tracking changes and do some editing, but I can’t edit a Kindle download. Too
bad. Or...maybe that’s a good thing.
7.14.2014
#NewRelease - Murderous Lies by Chantel Rhondeau
Released: July 11, 2014
Author: Chantel Rhondeau
Genre: Romantic
Suspense/Murder Mystery
Length: 61,000 words
Imprisoned for murders he
didn’t commit, Max Kensington is exonerated after eight years when a new
witness steps forward. He returns to his hometown and no one’s happy to see him,
least of all his ex-fiancée, Rosemary Spelling.
Max’s return forces Rose to
confront her feelings about the past. The day he killed her sister ruined Rose’s
life, destroying her family and landing her mother in a mental institution.
When someone leaves a bloody
threat on Rose’s porch, the police jump to conclusions, assuming Max is after
revenge. Rose isn’t so sure. She begins questioning Max’s guilt, wondering if someone
is trying to cover up what really happened to her sister.
All Max wants is his life
back and a chance to regain Rose’s love. To get that, he has to catch the
killer. His obsessive need for justice drives his actions, but the murderer
seems a step ahead. When new bodies surface, evidence points to Max as the
culprit. Now he could lose everything when the killer zeroes in on a new target…Rose.
Content Warning: Language,
Violence, and Sizzling Love Scenes
“Exciting cat-and-mouse mystery full of surprising twists and scorching second chances.” ~ Rachelle Ayala – Romantic Suspense Author
Read the
first two chapters: http://bit.ly/1p780vQ
On Sale for only 99 cents for two weeks only! Buy it Now!
Amazon Kindle:
KOBO: http://bit.ly/1i32rym
Barnes & Noble: http://bit.ly/1p786Uq
Apple iBooks: http://bit.ly/UEU9SR
All Romance eReads: http://bit.ly/1qZf11n
Smashwords: http://bit.ly/1qngtgs
Author Bio

She live in the western United States, and when she's not writing
she love playing cards with her family, bowling on leagues, and snuggling with
her lazy kitties.
Want to contact Chantel?
Website: http://www.chantelrhondeau.com
Cyber Stalk on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/ChantelRhondeau
Follow on Twitter https://twitter.com/ChantelRhondeau
Check out all Chantel's available titles: http://www.chantelrhondeau.com/p/my-available-titles.html
7.11.2014
Ten Things That Might Surprise An Unpublished Author
You should have heard me squeal when I got the email
offering my first publishing contract. There is nothing more magical to an
unpublished writer than the words, “If your story is still available, we would
like to offer you a contract.” My family thought I’d found a snake in the
house...again.
Before my first release, I didn’t know much about becoming a
published author. I thought all I had to do was write a great story. Silly me! After
two years, I’m still finding out what it means to be published. Here are a few
things I’ve learned along the way.
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