Tuesday, February 28, 2012

Contest & Conversation with DELIVER ME FROM DARKNESS, Paranormal Romance Author Tes Hilaire




Why do you write?

TH:  Paranormal Romance is my main focus right now, though I do take some time to play in the genres of UF and YA. When I’m not busy doing that, I’m probably trying not to write my children’s book reports for them.  I have to give it to all my teachers whom I didn’t appreciate until now; teaching is sooo much harder than doing! At least in my opinion.

Name one eye-opening thing you learned from your book research.

TH:  The amount of information out there that contradicts each other. You can find two totally different accounts of a legend/myth depending on where you look.

Do you have a favorite motto?

TH: Hmmm… Well I used to have a tag line, but I’ve had to modify it a bit since its birth. It goes something like this now: Imagination is just the beginning….after that it’s all blood, sweat, and tears! Of course, I suppose I could just say perseverance is the key to success but that’s not nearly so interesting, is it? ;-)

Do you have a favorite fictional hero?

TH: Do I have to narrow this down?  Okay, well, I’m going to have to go with Curran from Ilona Andrew’s “Kate Daniels” series.  Just because, having just devoured books 1-5, it’s fairly recent in my mind and I love a hero that I get to revisit book after book after book…  PLEASE WRITE MORE Ilona!

Which fictional character would you hang out with?

TH: There is another whole bookshelf full of these, but today I’m in need of a pick me up (it’s raining) so I’m going to go with Lulu from the Stephanie Plum books. She’s completely outrageous and would keep me entertained for hours, and she likes fried chicken (a personal weakness of mine).

What is one of your favorite book covers, your own or someone else’s?

TH: Well of course I love my own. The wonderful Patricia Schmitt did a great job with it (check out her other stuff at http://pickymeartist.com/).  That said I’m a real sucker for either the dark, gritty UF covers (think Karen Chance’s Cassandra Palmer series) or the paranormal YA cover styles (Think Hush, Hush or Fallen or Wicked Lovely.)

What would readers be surprised to learn about you?

TH: I’m an alien come down from Mars to… No? Okay, you’re right, I’m pulling your leg.  Really there isn’t much that I won’t tell anyone. Ask away and I’m an open book.  We’ll start with this: I didn’t always know I was going to be a writer, that’s why I went to college and got my degree in biology with the expectation of going on to vet school…

If you could go backward or forward in time which would you chose?

TH: That’s a hard one, but I think forward.  Mainly for the curiosity factor.  Sure it would be amazing to go back and really experience something from the past, but I think the great adventure is really in tomorrow.

Tes, please share with us more about Deliver Me from Darkness released by Sourcebooks.

TH: Deliver Me from Darkness is my debut book. It just came out on February 7th so needless to say I’m very excited.  And to sum it up in a quick elevator pitch the book is about Roland, a vigilante vampire and fallen angel who yearns for, but doesn’t believe in, redemption for his soul—until his bondmate is delivered to his door J

Deliver Me From Darkness is a paranormal romance. What is it about the paranormal genre that piqued your curiosity to place your stories in?

TH: I read across the board; PNR, UF, YA, fantasy, suspense, historical, contemporary, even those darn book-club books that make you cry…I read them all.  I think why I’ve settled down on the paranormal side of things is simply because of the pure possibilities in them. See, in paranormal (unlike, say, historical) I can take something like the legend of the Paladin and let my imagination go!

Okay, I want to give a warm welcome to, Karissa Donovan and Roland, a Paladin warrior. (Waving frantically, trying to get the besotted couple’s attention). I know you two have gone through a lot to get to your happily ever after so I will try to be brief. (Blushes scarlet as she catches the intimate glance between the newlyweds), clears her throat...

Okay, so you two are still in the honeymoon stage, I see. I would like to know what each of you thought when you first laid eyes on the other.

“The first time? Well…” Karissa looks down in her lap where she’s twisting her hands. When she looks back up there is a sense of haunting in her eyes. “At first I thought he was a monster. And that he would kill me.”

Roland reaches over and stills her nervous movement by entwining his hand with hers and bringing it to his lips for a kiss. “It is okay, ma petite peste. At first I thought you were little more than an annoyance.”

Karissa smiles at this, though there is a wicked light in her eyes. “Admit it, you wanted to eat me.”

Roland grins back mischievously.  “Of a surety.”

Was it love at first sight?

“For me?” Roland asks. “The moment she opened her eyes. Of course convincing her that we were meant to be? That was harder.”

Karissa shakes her head. “No, I knew. Deep down I knew. I just didn’t know.” Karissa shrugs. “If that makes any sense.”

When you met, did you believe in true love? You can all answer. I’m quite curious to know all of your opinions.

“Honestly?” Karissa asks. “I’m not sure. My mother died when I was born and soon after my grandmother died as well. I never new my father until recently and my grandfather was so fearful of the evil out there that he pretty much tried to obliterate any notions of happily ever after for me in hopes that I’d stay safe. So when I met Roland? I’m embarrassed to say I was too scared by what he was to understand the true emotions he pulled from my heart. Thankfully, I didn’t resist him, or those emotions, for long. What?” She glances at Roland. “A day? Two?”

“Something like that,” Roland agrees. “Though for me it was a day or two too long.”

“Hmm.” Karissa purses her lips, her gaze considering as she studies her mate. “If I recall, you were the one who wouldn’t make love to me when I finally threw myself at you.”

Roland leans in toward her, his eyes flashing crimson as he drags his gaze down over her body, then back up to her face, stopping in an elongated pause on her lips. “Let me make it up to you now.”

Okay!  …Karissa, name the one thing about Roland that you believe won your heart.

Karissa tears her gaze from Roland’s, her cheeks turning a pretty shade of pink as she lifts her chin. “He tried to protect me…even from himself.” Her mouth curls up in a wry smile. “Of course, by the time I finally got past my past prejudices to figure that out, I didn’t want him to protect me from him!”

Roland, name one thing about Karissa that you believe changed your outlook on love.

“Her belief in my inherent goodness.” He reaches out to cup Karissa’s face, fisting his other hand and placing it over his heart. “And for that I owe you my body, heart, and soul. Thank you.”

Now, back to Tes…

Tes, what is more difficult to write: an intense sexual scene or a heart-wrenching emotional scene? Why? 

TH: Heart-wrenching.  Mainly because the intensity of a sexual scene allows you to show the characters’ emotions more easily.  When there is little action going on you have to use all the tricks in the book to show the readers how your characters are really feeling…without telling!

When you were writing Deliver Me from Darkness did you have music playing in the background?  If yes, what type?  Does music play an intricate part in your writing?

TH:  Sometimes yes, sometimes no. Some days I need silence to write.  Like those heart-wrenching emotional scenes?  I need the blank slate to work from.  Now action scenes or sex scenes need a good soundtrack to them.  As far as type? Well, my playlist is as changing as my mood.  I’ve listened to a lot of Coldplay and Mumford and Son’s for those times when I’m grooving,  but I also listen to a lot of what I call kick-ass music (which is almost heavy metal but not quite) and new age stuff like Enigma or Enya.  Go figure.

Which do you find is most important to you as a writer, voice or story? Why?

TH: Voice. More specifically the character’s voice.  If I don’t have the character’s voice right than I can’t do justice to their story. I end up having them do things that they wouldn’t do and the scene doesn’t feel organic.  Sometimes I don’t notice right away and pages, even scenes go by before I realize that I wasn’t really in my character’s head when I wrote the scene. At that point there is a lot of hair pulling and deleting going on. Sigh.

Tes, please share with readers where they can connect with you in cyber world. :)

TH: You can always visit me on my website www.teshilaire.com. I also have a short story site which I host at www.theinnerimp.com, this is a work in progress but I hope to have more on this in the next six months.  You can also visit me at facebook.com/TesHilaireAuthor, this is where I post all the places you can find me or any contests I’m running. 

I know this is a difficult question with there being so many amazing authors out there to choose from but who are some of the GOT-TO-HAVE authors in your TBR pile?

TH: Oh gosh… I think I have about a zillion Got-to-Have authors and am finding more everyday… but if you’re talking release day got-to-haves: Karen Marie Moning, JR Ward, Patricia Briggs, Ilona Andrews, Sophie Jordan, Shannon Delaney, Ann Aguirre, Suzanne Brockmann…to name a few.

What’s next in the works for you? When can readers expect to see it out on shelves in their local bookstores?

TH: Deliver Me from Temptation is coming out in December 2012!  I can’t wait to share Logan’s story with you J

Tes, thanks so much for stopping by and chatting with Over the Edge Reviews readers and myself; it has really been a blast getting to know more about you and your books.

TH: Thank you so much for having me!  I love getting to know people J  And on that note, maybe some of our wonderful readers today can tell me a little something about themselves that I wouldn’t know (which is probably a lot, but doesn’t have to be anything big…something as simple as the Got-To-Have authors on your shelves will do ;-)!


DELIVER ME FROM DARKNESS BY TES HILAIRE – IN STORES NOW

A stranger in the night…

He had once been a warrior of the Light, one of the revered Paladin. A protector. But now he lives in sin darkness, and the shadows are his sanctuary. Every day is a struggle to overcome the bloodlust. Especially the day Karissa shows up on his doorstep.

Comes knocking on the door…

She is light and bright and everything beautiful—despite her scratches and torn clothes. Every creature of the night is after her. So is every male Paladin. Because Karissa is the last female of their kind. But she is his. He may not have a soul, but he can’t deny his heart.




ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Daphne Award-winning author and former Tennessee native Tes Hilaire doesn’t remember how old she was when she wrote her first story, but she’s pretty sure it had something to do with a boy and a girl and a happily ever after.  Displaced at an early age to “the north country,” her stories turned darker as she started creating whole new worlds to escape the harsh, upstate NY winters. Now back in the South, her stories remain edgy, exciting, and bring a hint of dark fantasy to paranormal romance. Best of all, no one ever has to shovel snow. For more, visit her website at www.teshilaire.com.



~ CONTEST~

RCJR is proud to present debut paranormal author Tes Hilaire's Sourcebook release, DELIVER ME FROM DARKNESS, the first installment in her phenomenal Deliver Me series. 

THE PRIZE: Two lucky readers will win their very own copy of DELIVER ME FROM DARKNESS.

To enter: Please leave a comment for Tes Hilaire including your email address.

*Connect with RCJR eZine at:

***
Contest is open to ALL
It will runs until March 4, 2012
I will contact the winners directly on March 5, 2012
HAPPY READING! =)




Tuesday, February 14, 2012

Contest & Conversation with Bestselling Author Kathryne Kennedy about Her Latest in her Elvin Series,THE LORD OF ILLUSION




The Lord of Illusion
Series: 3rd book in The Elvin Series
by
Paranormal Romance
Author



Why do you write?

KK: I’ve been writing since I learned how to read. It comes as naturally to me as breathing.

Name one eye-opening thing you learned from your book research.

KK: Historically that some doctors considered a woman’s orgasm as a type of madness. That actually cracked me up.

Do you have a favorite motto?

KK: If you don’t have something nice to say, don’t say anything at all.

Do you have a favorite fictional hero?  Favorite fictional heroine?

KK: My favorites are always those from the book I just finished writing. So currently, it would be Millicent and Gareth from the forthcoming Everlasting Enchantment.

Which fictional character would you hang out with?

KK: Millicent. I would love to see her shift into a panther.

What is one of your favorite book covers, your own or someone else’s?


KK: I adore Patricia McKillip’s covers, especially Alphabet of Thorn. The artistry and detail are amazing. My publisher also does a fabulous job on covers…they keep getting better and better. They gave me a sneak peek at the re-release cover for Enchanting the Lady, and I love it! There’s a small dragonette on the heroine’s shoulder.

What would readers be surprised to learn about you?


KK: I honestly don’t know.

What’s the strangest thing you’ve ever learned by Googling your name?


KK: So now I had to go and Google it. :} I’m surprised to see I have a Wikipedia page…there’s some mistakes in it, so I wonder who provided the info? Ah, well, the mysteries of the internet.

If you could go backward or forward in time which would you chose?  Why?


KK: Backward. I would like to have a chat with Jesus Christ.

Kathryne, please share with us more about your third THE ELVIN LORDS installment THE LORD OF ILLUSION released by Sourcebooks Casablanca.


KK:  The Lord of Illusion features a scholar, Drystan Hawkes, who has been searching for years to find the one woman who might hold the key to freeing England from its slavery to the Elven Lords who invaded the country long ago. It’s about Camille Ashton, a girl enslaved in Dreamhame palace by the elven lord of glamour and illusion. It’s about healing hearts, and finding true love, and ultimately using that strength to conquer a great evil.

I noticed that you’re THE ELVIN LORDS series in the late 18th century aka the Classical, or Georgian, period. What is it about the time period that peaks your curiosity that made you set your series in?


KK: I had written a series in the Victorian era, and wanted to explore a different period in history. The Georgian era was a time of decadence, luxury and romance, a perfect foil for the personalities of my elven lords.

Okay, I want to give a warm welcome to, Camille Ashton and Lord Drystan Hawke. (Waving franticly, trying to get the besotted couple’s attention). I know you two have gone through a lot to get to your happily ever after so I will try to be brief. (Blushes scarlet as she catches the intimate glance between the newlyweds), clears her throat...

Okay, so you two are still in the honeymoon stage, I see. I would like to know what each of you thought when you first laid eyes on the other. Was it love at first sight?


Camille: I had forgotten what love was. So for me, no…I was too busy struggling to survive. (Lowers her eyes and squeezes Drystan’s hand.) He had to teach me how to love again.

Drystan: I had been dreaming of Camille for so long that I think I was in love with her before we even met. (The corner of his lip twitches.) When I first saw her in person, she was covered in black ash and some sort of smelly grease…and looked determined to shoot me. So I’m not sure if love at first sight would qualify to describe our first meeting.

When you met, did you believe in true love? You can all answer. I’m quite curious to know all of your opinions.


Camille: No. (She sighs.) Love seemed like something only the wealthy could afford, and the dalliances were so brief it was more of a game than anything else.


Drystan: (Shaking his head, long white-blond hair brushing broad shoulders.) Camille had never heard of poetry. But I…I loved to read, and knew of many great romances. I believed in true love…I believed in it enough for the both of us.

Camille, name the one thing about Drystan that you believe won your heart.


Camille: Only one? (She raises a white-blond brow.) That’s hard…but perhaps it was when he saved my life…or when Grimor’ee, a dragon, made him jealous…or when he read my first poem to me…or when…I’m sorry, it’s so hard to choose.

My Lord, name one thing about Camille that you believe changed your outlook on love.


Drystan: I thought that when I met her, it would be like the stories in my books. She would fall into my arms and the earth would move and birds would sing. (He laughs, tugs at a pointed ear.) But it was nothing like that. It was better. It was real and complicated and everything love should truly be.

And now, back to Kathryne…

Kathryne, while you were writing Camille and Drystan’s story was there a scene that popped out the most?


KK: Definitely. When Drystan took Camille to the elven garden. It still stands out in my mind as beautiful, sensual, and poignant.

Kathryne, what is more difficult to write: an intense sexual scene or a heart-wrenching emotional scene?  Why?


KK: The sexual scenes are the easiest for me to write. My fingers fly across the keyboard. :} What’s difficult is weaving in the emotional context for each of those scenes, how they further the relationship between my hero and heroine. Why? I think it requires more vulnerability on my part—to lower my own defenses and write from the heart.

When you were writing THE LORD OF ILLUSION did you have music playing in the background?  If yes, what type?  Does music play an intricate part in your writing?


KK: Music inspires me, and I can visualize scenes while listening to a song. But I must have quiet when I write, because I need to immerse myself in the story, with no distractions that might keep me in the real world.

Which do you find is most important to you as a writer, voice or story? Why?


KK: Both. You have to have an interesting story to tell, and an accessible voice to tell it. Like all the other elements of storytelling, they must be woven together.

Kathryne, please share with desperate readers where they can connect with you in cyber world. =)


KK: At my website, http://www.kathrynekennedy.com. If you go to my BIO page, I have links to all the other social networking sites I’m a part of, where you can hook up with me. :}

I know this is a difficult question with there being so many amazing authors out there to choose from but who are some of the GOT-TO-HAVE authors in your TBR pile?


KK: Patricia McKillip, Sharon Shinn, Andre Norton, Erin Quinn, Jude Deveraux, Robin McKinley, Eloisa James, Robin Hobb…just off the top of my head.

What’s next in the works for you?  When can readers expect to see it out on shelves in their local bookstores?


KK: The re-release of Enchanting the Lady, and then the brand-new fourth book in the Relics of Merlin series, Everlasting Enchantment.

Kathryne, thanks so much for stopping by and chatting with Over the Edge Reviews readers and myself; it has really been a blast getting to know more about you and your books.


KK: It’s my pleasure! And thank you for putting together such a fun and fascinating interview! I’m looking forward to reading the comments from readers today, and wish everyone the best of luck in the giveaway!

THE LORD OF ILLUSION BY KATHRYNE KENNEDY—IN STORES FEBRUARY 2012

He'll do anything to save her...


Rebel Lord Drystan Hawkes dreams of fighting for England's freedom from the endless evils of the Elven Lords. He gets his chance when he finds a clue to opening the magic portal to Elfhame, and he must race to find the slave girl who holds the key to the mystery. But even as Drystan rescues Camille Ashton from Dreamhame Palace, it becomes unclear exactly who is saving whom.

For the fate of humankind lies with Camille...



Enslaved for years in a realm where illusion and glamour reign, Camille has learned to trust nothing and no one. But she's truly spellbound when she meets Drystan--a man different from any she's ever known, and the force of their passion may yet be strong enough to banish the Elven Lords from this world forever.


Praise for The Lord of Illusion
“The world sings with vivid imagery and fantastic magic, and all the previous characters join forces in a thrilling final fight for humankind.” —Publishers Weekly Starred review

“The hero and heroine are also out of the ordinary, and while this novel remains true to romance-genre mores, Kennedy infuses it with unexpected plot twists that will keep fantasy readers enthralled, too.” —Booklist Starred review

“Superb writing and a fast-moving plot combined with magical passion make this a real page-turner!” —RT Book Reviews 4 ½ Stars and Top Pick of the Month


ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Kathryne Kennedy is a critically acclaimed, best-selling, award-winning author of magical romances. She welcomes readers to visit her website where she has ongoing contests at www.kathrynekennedy.com. She’s lived in Guam, Okinawa, and several states in the U.S., and currently lives with her wonderful family in Arizona, where she is working on the next book in her Relics of Merlin series, Everlasting Enchantment.



~ CONTEST~

RCJR is proud to present historical paranormal romance author Kathryne Kennedy's Sourcebook release, THE LORD OF ILLUSION, the third installment in his phenomenal The Elvin series. 

THE PRIZE: Two lucky readers will win their very own copy of THE LORD OF ILLUSION

To enter: Please leave a comment for Kathryne Kennedy including your email address.

*Connect with RCJR eZine at:

***
Contest is open to ALL
It will runs until February 29, 2012
I will contact the winners directly on March 1, 2012
HAPPY READING! =)


Tuesday, February 7, 2012

Conversation & Contest with Romantic Suspense Author of THE NIGHT IS MINE By M.L. Buchman



THE NIGHT IS MINE
BY 
Romantic Suspense
Author
M.L. Buchman



What is the best part of being a writer? What is the worst?

MB: I love having a free license to sit in the corner and play with my characters, to build a story, to bring a blank page to life. It is one of the satisfying and emotional challenging things I’ve ever attempted. When the story is going well, I sit in my corner and chortle (or cry) along with my characters. When it’s going badly, I want to pound my head through a wall for ever imagining that writing was a good idea. That’s all on the good side though.

The worst part?

 I think it’s the people. Not the ones who come up to me at a party, find out I’m a writer and want me to help them with the million-copy book idea they just never get around to. Nor is it the 100th eager beginner just dying to know the secret key (they never like the answer which is that there is one, put your butt in the chair and write the book, then the next one, then the next). I think the worst is the naysayers, the ones who only believe we are destined to fail at our dreams, that want to drag me from my fantasy of writing into their world of “it can happen, just not to you.” My father was the champion of these, though I’m sorry to say I lost several friends this way as well. I lost my entire first critique group, and I thought we were quite close, because I landed the first sale back in 1996. It started coming apart the very next day.

Why do you write?

MB: I stumbled into writing by starting a vignette about a freshman roommate who killed alarm clocks, regularly. I often woke up to watch one go flying by. And it sort of turned into my first novel sale, “Cookbook from Hell” about the Devil having her mid-life crisis, though neither the roommate (sorry, Andy) nor the alarm clocks made it into the story. But what hooked me was how much fun I had doing it. I have developed a passion for attempting to capture human nature and place it on the page, for the places that leads my thoughts, my reading and my research. My theme can be seen a couple questions down. But my “why” is because it is just so much fun!

Name one eye-opening thing you learned from your book research.

MB: “The Night Stalker” series and “The Night is Mine” started from an accidental discovery. In another book, my foodie thriller “Swap Out!” I had a woman show up to rescue the hero chef in a nasty military helicopter. I don’t know why, at that point I didn’t know who she was, but she showed up. So, I had to start researching military helicopters. That’s when I stumbled on SOAR, the U.S. Army’s Special Operations Aviation Regiment. They’re the ones who take SEALs, Rangers, Delta Force to places no one else can get to, and then they go back in to get them out.

But that wasn’t the eye-opener. The thing that really rocked me back on my heels was learning why they did it, and their “why.” For no glory (if you hear about it, it probably means they screwed up, except a few things like bin Laden and Grenada and…), they train constantly. These are professionals with immense experience who have volunteered to take brutal tests at least 5 times over at least a half decade and then require 2 more years of training before they’re mission ready. These are the rock stars and celebrities of their profession. What I learned was the immense respect (which is too small a word) that I have for these individuals. Just reading and writing about them has changed the way I think of our military, not necessarily the political choices but rather those who chose to serve as a career, and how I now think of the gift of my own personal safety for the random chance of being born in this country rather than another. I didn’t expect that.

Do you have a favorite motto?

MB: It sits on the wall above my writing desk, right where my eye naturally travels if I look away from the screen: “To Champion the Human Spirit, to Celebrate the Power of Joy, and Revel in the Wonder of Love.” That’s my writing motto… the words are mine.

Do you have a favorite fictional hero? Favorite fictional heroine?

MB: Two come easily to mind, followed quickly by a dozen others. Alvin, from Arthur C. Clarke’s “The City and the Stars” came first. I discovered him at ten and I was completely captivated by his insatiable desire to know. In my teen years, Dagny Taggart rode her train right out of “Atlas Shrugged” as a symbol of hope. The naysayers I mentioned before didn’t land on earth when I started writing, they were there in high school and childhood too. But when faced with choices, hard choices, I am always drawn to her determination, her dream and active quest for a better place, a better way of living, of being.

Which fictional character would you hang out with?

MB: Alvin is a little one dimensional and Dagny a little driven-almost-scary. Leaving my own books aside, a journey through Wonderland would be fun. The cat and I would have a great time smiling at people, but it’s not a place I’d lose my head over. I’d hang with someone calm but fun, interesting and thoughtful yet able to act when called upon, someone triumphant. Jack Reacher comes to mind, almost any of Susan Wiggs heroines would be a hoot and several of her heroes. Push came to shove, I’d probably settle down in an Irish cottage, cook meals with Nora’s heroine of “Born in Ice,” laugh and drink with her husband and the gang down at the local pub, and go back and bury myself in my next novel until it was time to do it all over again. I’ve always liked that crowd and keep going back to them.

What is one of your favorite book covers, your own or someone else’s?

MB: “The Mote in God’s Eye” has always grabbed me. And the crouching Atlas on “Atlas Shrugged.” I love Burrough’s “The Princess of Mars,” the lush drawing of half-naked people and strange aliens because it exemplifies exactly what the book is. I’m particularly happy with the cover I just designed for the first book of my latest romance series, “Where Dreams are Born.” And I have to confess, though I was at first shocked that I’d ever written a book that would have a cover like “The Night is Mine,” that it’s really growing on me. It describes the book wonderfully and really grabs the eye. Sourcebooks, my publisher, just nailed it. … and wait until you see the second book’s cover. Whee!

What would readers be surprised to learn about you?

MB: That I’m male and write romance. That’s one that stops folks in the street. By day, a highly skilled project manager, by night, a Romance Novelist! I think the most surprising is the variety of things I’ve done: I used to fly small planes, I rebuilt a 50-foot sailboat and could single-hand it pretty comfortably, I’ve designed and built two houses, and bicycled solo around the world. None of which were what I did for a living. I just asked my wife: she said it was the day (while we were still dating), that I showed up wearing a tool belt (she had some things I could fix easily) and carrying a bread machine (I had one and she’d mentioned she’d always wanted to play with one).

What’s the strangest thing you have ever learned by Googling your name?

MB: That I am: a) a pretty successful middle school sports coach in Chetek, Wisconsin (I’ve been following his success for a couple of years now) and b) that I’m running for State Representative in Arkansas www.buchmannow.com.

If you could go backward or forward in time which would you chose? Why?

MB: Forward, except my wife would go back. I want to see what’s next, what’s possible, what we’ve figured out how to do. We are in a time of ever expanding possibility and I love that. But my wife has a point, going back a little before technology supplanted a quiet evening spent chatting with friends, when you knew, for better or worse, the neighbors in your town, when you were more likely to grow up, belong, continue together… I wouldn’t mind that much either.

M.L., congratulations on the release of your latest in your Night Stalker series, “THE NIGHT IS MINE” released by Sourcebooks Casablanca. Please share a bit more about it.

MB: Some books just walk out of the mist and slap me up side the head, some I start out with a plan, though I’m never able to predict the twists and turns. This was one of the latter. I had been reading and eventually researching the world of SOAR, the most elite helicopter pilots ever to launch into the night sky. And I thought about the challenges of a woman entering a man’s world. Not just the working world, but like the first all-women’s team to sail in the America’s Cup trials. Women have a certain role they must choose to survive when they cross into such male-dominated worlds (even more so than they must simply to survive in our day-to-day world) and Emily Beale does it by simply being better at the men’s game than the men are. (A peek ahead, Kee Smith does it by being a complete bulldog, a real fighter. Man oh man is she tenacious.)

So, I had my lead character and my world, but I wanted to have fun with it. I made her a childhood friend of the President, her first crush, and sent her to protect the First Lady. But a long ago first crush doesn’t even register when faced with the intense attraction of her commanding officer… That’s where it got fun!

Which do you find is most important to you as a writer, voice or story? Why?

MB: To me its voice, voice, voice, and voice. I see story as something that is driven by the characters. Their unique voice (in speaking, in thought, in action, in reaction [hence the 4 repetitions]) is what will shape the story around them. Story is what happens in the book, voice is what makes us remember the character after we put the book back down.

M.L, where can readers connect with you in cyber world? =)

MB: www.mlbuchman.com is my personal blog and that’s my main contact with the outside world. I have a very limited Facebook presence mainly because I’d rather be writing the next book. My day job world is LinkedIn and www.matthewbuchman.com.

I know this is a difficult question with there being so many amazing authors out there to choose from, but who are some of the GOT-TO-HAVE authors in your TBR pile?

MB: There are some authors that I’ve gone out and read every word they’ve written: Rand, Hesse, Clarke, Lewis Carroll, Clavell, Austen, Tolkien, Shakespeare. There are some I’ve read an immense amount of: Asimov, Nora, Heinlein, Dickens. There are some I wish I had time to: King, Wiggs, Kinsale, Stephenson. My bedside pile presently has: Westerfeld, Grayson & Rusch (same author – a lot of hers), Jemison, Atwood, and Lee Child. (Plus a couple books on helicopters.)

What’s next in the works for you? When can readers expect to see it out on shelves in their local bookstores?

MB: August will bring about “I Own the Dawn” and the 1st female addition to Emily’s helicopter crew. The DAP Black Hawk has 4 seats and hence my 4-book series “The Night Stalkers” fills them one-by-one. Kee Smith is the gunner and she’s awesome. I love that book! (Of course I love all my books.) I’m nearing the end of a couple of fantasy novels that will be available soon. I also just pubbed the first of my “Angelo’s Hearth” contemporary romance series “Where Dreams Are Born.” Two calendars, twelve lighthouses, and two hearts… that are looking for anyone but each other. Look for book 2 of Angelo’s this fall.

M.L, thanks so much for stopping by and chatting with Over the Edge readers and myself; it has really been a blast getting to know more about you and your books.

MB: Thanks for the great questions! I love being pushed into really thinking about things.





THE NIGHT IS MINE BY M.L. BUCHMAN

Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781402258107
  • Publisher: Sourcebooks, Incorporated
  • Publication date: 2/1/2012
  • Format: Mass Market Paperback
  • Pages: 416
  • Sales rank: 77,781
  • Product dimensions: 4.20 (w) x 6.80 (h) x 1.30 (d)
  • ORDER



NAME: Emily Beale
RANK: Captain
MISSION: Fly undercover to prevent the assassination of the First Lady, posing as her executive pilot.

NAME: Mark Henderson, code name Viper
RANK: Major
MISSION: Undercover role of wealthy, ex-mercenary boyfriend to Emily

Their jobs are high risk, high reward:

Protect the lives of the powerful and the elite at all cost. Neither expected that one kiss could distract them from their mission. But as the passion mounts between them, their lives and their hearts will both be risked...and the reward this time may well be worth it.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
M. L. Buchman has worked in fast food, theater, computers, publishing, and light manufacturing. It's amazing what you can do with a degree in geophysics. At one point he sold everything and spent 18-months riding a bicycle around the world. In 11,000 miles, he touched 15 countries and hundreds of incredible people. Since then, he has acquired a loving lady, the coolest kid on the planet, and lives in Portland, Oregon. For more information, please visit http://www.mlbuchman.com/.



~ CONTEST~

RCJR is proud to present romantic suspense author M.L. Buchman's Sourcebook release, THE NIGHT IS MINE, the first installment in his phenomenal The Night Stalkers series. 

THE PRIZE: Two lucky readers will win their very own copy of THE NIGHT IS MINE.

To enter: Please leave a comment for M.L. Buchman including your email address.

*Connect with RCJR eZine at:

***
Contest is open to ALL
It will runs until February 14, 2012
I will contact the winners directly on February 15, 2012
HAPPY READING! =)



 

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