4/11/2012

GET LOST WITH ALYSSA EVERETT

RUINED BY RUMOR
May 21st
Carina Press
ASIN: B007BBVC6M
After waiting five years for her fiancé to return from the war and marry her, Roxana Langley has been jilted! She may have longed for excitement, but this was not what she had in mind….

Who could possibly throw over a woman as beautiful and vivacious as Roxana? Certainly not Alex Winslow, the Earl of Ayersley, who has spent years trying in vain to forget his unrequited love. When he learns she’s been abandoned by her cad of a fiancé, he finds himself offering a shoulder for her to cry on. Comfort soon turns into a passionate kiss—and scandal when they are caught in an embrace. 

Only one thing will save Roxana from certain ruination: marriage to the earl. The match may save her reputation, but responsible, tongue-tied Ayserly is a far cry from her dashing former fiancé. She’s convinced Ayersley is merely doing his duty…while he’s sure Roxana is still in love with another man. Are they trading one disaster for another?

READ ALL THE “RUIN”
Read an excerpt from RUINED BY RUMOR, coming from Carina Press in May 2012.  Roxana Langley is attending a ball given by her brother’s childhood friend, the reserved and self-conscious Earl of Ayersley, when her cavalry-hero fiancé unexpectedly jilts her. When Roxana retreats to the earl’s library to regain her composure, Lord Ayersley follows to check on her.  Roxana tells him the news of her broken engagement, and his reaction is typically but frustratingly understated.

What a Job’s comforter he was, refusing even to feel sorry for her.  “But don’t my feelings count for anything?  And what about my reputation?  I have two choices open to me, to appear a jilt, or to appear something even worse—the kind of girl who deserves to be jilted.”

“Your friends will know better.”  All the earl’s usual reticence had vanished.  Standing only inches from her, he dipped his dark head low enough to look her in the eye, his hand still holding hers.  “You think people will talk.  So they may.  But it will be a nine-days wonder and then something new will take its place.  You must believe that.  In the end, you’ll be the happier for this.”

“Be the happier!”  Incredulous, she tore her hand from his grasp.  “I’m twenty-three years old.  I waited five years for George Wyatt while he fought on the Continent.  I dreamed of marrying him!  Now everyone will point me out as the girl Major Wyatt would not marry, and make guesses at the reason why.  And you think I’ll be the happier?”

She was shaking.

Ayersley stretched out a hand toward her again.  “I’m sorry, but…It’s not easy for a man to face a woman and tell her it’s over.  If Major Wyatt broke off your engagement, you can be sure tonight wasn’t the first time the possibility crossed his mind.  You’ll save yourself a good deal of pain—and Wyatt too, though that may not matter to you now—if you’ll only let him go.”

“But I love him,” Roxana said, and realized with horror she was going to cry.  At first the hot tears simply stung her eyes and she tried to blink them back, but as one after another spilled over her cheeks she gave up the attempt.  Her face crumpled and she let out a sob.

“Miss Langley!”  The earl, stricken, stepped toward her and held open his arms.  She fell into them gratefully.

Suddenly everything that had gone wrong in the past few weeks came welling up, to pour out of her at once in a storm of emotion—George’s infidelity and neglect, her awful mortification when Ayersley caught them kissing in the church, and now this long, humiliating night.

Sobs choked her, making her breath come in harsh gasps like those of a frustrated child.  She was always making a fool of herself, and now she could add to the list of her stupid blunders having blindly devoted herself to George Wyatt, only to be unceremoniously thrown over.  She shut her eyes against the betraying tears, but they only fell faster.

“Oh, Roxana, he isn’t worth it,” the earl whispered.  Still the sobs wracked her shoulders, shaking her, making her head pound.  She leaned her forehead on the earl’s white waistcoat and let the tears come, hot and bitter.  How silly and laughable she must seem to him.

Her sobbing went on for what felt like forever, while Ayersley held her, patient.  With her upraised hand against his chest, she could feel the strong beat of his heart.  At last the flood of emotion began to exhaust itself and she sniffled and turned her head.  The tears were still there but they were slower now and she could breathe again.  She gulped to ease the knot in her throat.  Still Ayersley went on holding her.

READ MORE OF THE EXCERPT   

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Alyssa Everett grew up in Florida, where from an early age her favorite books typically had dukes in them.  A fan of Halloween, the perfect shoes, and springer spaniels, she now lives with her husband and their three children in small-town Pennsylvania. Ruined by Rumor, in May 2012 is Everett's debut Regency Romance.  Expect her second, A Tryst with Trouble coming from Dorchester soon.


GETTING TO KNOW ALYSSA
ANGI: How often to you get lost in a story?
ALYSSA:  As often as I can!  I do a lot of my reading in the car, waiting to pick my kids up from an afterschool activity or while riding in the passenger seat on a long drive.  I’m so grateful I don’t get sick from reading in a moving car.

ANGI: What’s the first book you remember reading? 
ALYSSA:  The Black Stallion and the Girl by Walter Farley, in second grade.  I would sneak books under my desk and read them whenever the teacher wasn’t looking.  The only thing I remember about the book is that the eponymous Girl had high cheekbones and everyone she met fell instantly in love with her.

ANGI: What’s your favorite “love” word?
ALYSSA:  I like “besotted.”  It has such great overtones of being drunk on love.

ANGI: Can you tell us about a real-life hero you’ve met?
ALYSSA:  My oldest son has autism, so for me, anyone who chooses to work in special education is a real-life hero. 

ANGI: What’s your favorite fairy tale?
ALYSSA:  Beauty and the Beast, because it’s all about seeing beyond the surface to a person’s true character beneath.  That’s a theme that runs through most of the stories I write. 

ANGI: What sound or noise do you love?
ALYSSA:  I love lying in bed at night and hearing a train whistle in the distance.  There’s something beautiful and a little melancholy in the sound.  Someone’s out there on that train, traveling through the darkness—maybe lonely, maybe heading for adventure.

ANGI: Fairy Tale or Action Adventure?
ALYSSA:  I like a little bit of both, fairy tale themes with action adventure pacing.

ANGI: What was the first story you remember writing?
ALYSSA:  In school, we were asked to write a continuation of the play “The Corn is Green.”  The play is about a turn-of-the-twentieth-century teacher who sets up a school in an impoverished Welsh coalmining town, and the promising young pupil she takes under her wing.  I remember being careful to try to capture what I thought was a Victorian/Edwardian tone by mentioning candlelight and carriages.  I would love to be able to reread it now because it was my first attempt at a historical voice and I suspect I made my Welsh coal miner’s son sound more like Dudley Do-Right.

ANGI: Who’s your favorite villain?
ALYSSA:  Do cartoon characters count? Because, harking back to my favorite fairy tale, I’d have to say my favorite villain is Gaston from the Disney version of Beauty and the Beast.  I prefer quick-witted, sensitive heroes, while Gaston is muscle-bound, self centered, and so conceited he literally can’t believe the heroine doesn’t want him.  His biggest claims to fame include being covered with hair and being especially good at expectorating. 

ANGI: What is your biggest vice?
ALYSSA:  It used to be drinking Diet Coke, but I quit cold turkey at the beginning of the year.  (It’s the second time I’ve quit, so it remains to be seen whether this time will stick better than the first time did.)  Now it’s a toss-up between having a sweet tooth and shopping online.

ANGI: Is there a “Blooper” in your story (it may have been changed before printing)?
ALYSSA:  It’s more a willful anachronism than a blooper, but I did use the word “blackmail” in its current sense even though A Tryst With Trouble is set in 1820.  The word didn’t come to mean “hush money paid to meet an extortion demand” until 1826, and it wasn’t used as a verb until 1852, but the term is so familiar to modern readers and would have been so awkward to write around, for the sake of clarity I bent the etymological timeline.

ANGI’S GOTTA ASK: From Florida gators to a Pennsylvania snowstorms… That’s a huge change for a Florida sunshine girl. What’s the first and biggest adjustment you had to make changing not only homes, but climates? Did your well-dressed Regency heroes bring their overcoats?
ALYSSA’S GOTTA ANSWER: We hardly had any winter at all this year, but most years, my Regency heroes would definitely need their overcoats!

The biggest adjustment I had to make after moving to Pennsylvania had to do with shoes, or the lack thereof.  It's the custom here in my small town for guests to remove their shoes when entering someone else's house.  I'd never heard of that before, outside of Japanese culture, but with snow, slush, and actual mud (the slippery black stuff, not the wet sand we had in Florida), it makes sense to do it in this corner of Pennsylvania.  Whenever I'm visiting friends, I have to remember to wear good socks with no holes in them, because we're all going to be walking around in our stocking feet.

And speaking of shoes, I was completely clueless when it came to equipping my children for the winters here.  Growing up on the Gulf coast, I never owned snowboots, snowpants, or mittens.  I'd go shopping in late November only to discover that every pair of children's snowpants in our local stores had already sold out.  Thank heavens for L. L. Bean.

FINDING ALYSSA

UP NEXT: A TRYST WITH TROUBLE
Dorchester
ISBN: 1428516425

Dogged for years by painful gossip about his father’s homosexuality, the Marquees of Beningbrough—Ben, to his friends—has protected himself by becoming the ultimate man’s man. Passed over by suitor after suitor in favor of her pretty but vapid younger sister, clever, forthright Lady Barbara Jeffords has reached the disappointing conclusion most men are shallow, boorish clods. When a philandering footman turns up dead, the two square off: he’s sure she’s determined to pin the crime on his hapless young cousin, while she thinks he means to shift the blame to her sister. To find the real killer, Ben and Barbara must declare a truce that threatens to expose both their buried insecurities and their growing desire for each other.

ALYSSA IS GIVING AWAY a $20 Amazon gift card (via email).

Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North America addresses only unless specifically mentioned in the post. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants. Winners of drawings are responsible for checking this site in a timely manner. If prizes are not claimed in a timely manner, the author may not have a prize available. Get Lost In A Story cannot be responsible for an author's failure to mail the listed prize. GLIAS does not automatically pass email addresses to guest authors unless the commenter publicly posts their email address.

DON’T FORGET to FOLLOW us on Twitter (#GetLostStories) or LIKE us on Facebook to keep up with all our guest authors and their prizes. Join Jill tomorrow when she hosts Tracey Devlin. Come back on FRIDAY THE 13th for a special Income Tax weekend with that great CPA Tax Investigator, Tara Holloway (Death, Taxes, and a French Manicure & Death, Taxes, and A Skinny No-Whip Latte by Diane Kelly)  ~Angi

ALYSSA WANTS TO KNOW:
What quality would you like to see more of in a romance hero?

4/10/2012

CRIME SCENE: HOUSTON and DiAnn Mills

THE CHASE
Zondervan
ISBN: 978-0310333173

To the FBI it's a cold case. To Kariss Walker it's a hot idea that could either reshape or ruin her writing career. And it's a burning mission to revisit an event she can never forget.

Five years ago, an unidentified little girl was found starved to death in the woods behind a Houston apartment complex. A TV news anchor at the time, Kariss reported on the terrifying case. Today, as a New York Times bestselling author, Kariss intends to turn the unsolved mystery into a suspense novel. Enlisting the help of FBI Special Agent Tigo Harris, Kariss succeeds in getting the case reopened. But the search for the dead girl's missing mother yields a discovery that plunges the partners into a witch's brew of danger.

THE TRAILER

THE EXCERPT

THE AUTHOR
Award-winning author DiAnn Mills is a fiction writer who combines an adventuresome spirit with unforgettable characters to create action-packed, suspense-filled novels. DiAnn’s first book was published in 1998. She currently has more than fifty books published. 

Her titles have appeared on the CBA and ECPA bestseller lists and have won placements through the American Christian Fiction Writer’s Carol Awards and Inspirational Reader’s Choice awards. DiAnn won the Christy Award in 2010 and 2011. 

DiAnn is a founding board member for American Christian Fiction Writers and a member of Inspirational Writers Alive, Romance Writers of America, and Advanced Writers and Speakers Association. She speaks to various groups and teaches writing workshops around the country. DiAnn is also the Craftsman mentor for the Jerry B. Jenkins Christian Writers Guild. 

She and her husband live in sunny Houston, Texas.

THE Q&A
ANGI: How often to you get lost in a story?
DIANN: Often! If I like the story, the world stops. I’m a tough reader to get hooked. The truth is if I’m not drawn into the story in the first or second line, then I’m on to the next one.

ANGI: What’s the first book you remember reading? 
DIANN: Little Women - over and over again. I knew I wanted to be a novelist like Jo. In fact, I adopted boys just like she did. 

ANGI: Can you tell us about a real-life hero you’ve met?
DIANN: A man who’d been one of the Lost Boys of Sudan. He is now the Bishop for the Episcopal Church of Aweil in the Northern Bahr al-Ghazal state of Southern Sudan. He’s making a difference and risking his life. We wrote a book together, and he calls me Mom. 

ANGI: What’s your favorite fairy tale?
DIANN: Beauty and the Beast. Belle saw the real man inside the beast. She fell in love with his heart, not his looks. I love the scene where they are dancing and she realizes her feelings for him. 

ANGI: Where do you read and how often?
DIANN: I read on the treadmill or elliptical every morning. Helps pass the time while I’m keeping in shape. :) 

ANGI: Fairy Tale or Action Adventure?
DIANN: Action adventure with a spunky heroine who isn’t afraid to step into a man’s role! 

ANGI: What was the first story you remember writing?
DIANN: A western. I was in the 2nd grade. Lots of gunfire and fast horses. 

ANGI: Who’s your favorite villain?
DIANN: Sweeney Todd

ANGI: What is your biggest vice?
DIANN: Impatience. There I said it.  

ANGI: How is it working with hot guys and sexy women all day?
DIANN: Intimidating, but I’m working on my confidence. If they get too out of hand, I bump ‘em off.  

ANGI’S GOTTA ASK: Hi DiAnn. The writer in me wants to know how you introduced yourself to the FBI for information regarding the cold case THE CHASE is based on. And I’m certain our readers would love to know some of the details you’ve come across or how many you were able to use in the book. Could you share?
DIANN’S GOTTA ANSWER: Initially, I phoned Houston’s FBI, introduced myself, and asked for the PR person. My initial goal was to interview the PR person for FBI protocol. Media Coordinator Shauna and I instantly became friends. She’d been recruited as a news anchor into the FBI, had been an agent, and is now in her current role. I wrote the book and she read every word so procedure and language would be correct. When Shauna finished, she wanted to know what was next! I asked what she had in mind. She suggested writing a series from solved cold cases. She got the clearance, and the Crime Scene: Houston series was born. The solved cold case used in The Chase captured my attention and passion. No matter what cases I looked at, my attention went back to the child found starved to death with no identity. I remembered the case - and with adopted children of my own - I had no choice but to write it. Shauna was fabulous, furnishing me with DVDs of press conferences and the victim board. The latter was a bit graphic, but I wanted my hero and heroine to feel the same anguish. That meant I had to experience tough emotions.

Shauna helped me with the second book in the series too. :) 

THE WHEREABOUTS
Contact      Website    Facebook   @diannmills   Goodreads   

THE NEXT RELEASE: The Survivor

THE PAST RELEASES
Check out DiAnn's fantastic website for a list of previous releases.

THE DRAWING
DiANN will be drawing for a copy of The Chase and will mail internationally.
Note: Number of entrants varies. Winners of drawings are responsible for checking this site in a timely manner. If prizes are not claimed in a timely manner, the author may not have a prize available. Get Lost In A Story cannot be responsible for an author's failure to mail the listed prize. GLIAS does not automatically pass email addresses to guest authors unless the commenter publicly posts their email address.

DON’T FORGET to FOLLOW us on Twitter (#GetLostStories) or LIKE us on Facebook to keep up with all our guest authors and their prizes. Join me tomorrow when I host Alyssa Everett. And come back Thursday when Jill hosts Tracey Devlin. A special Income Tax weekend with that great CPA Tax Investigator, Tara Holloway (Death, Taxes, and a French Manicure & Death, Taxes, and A Skinny No-Whip Latte by Diane Kelly)  ~Angi

DIANN’S GOT A QUESTION FOR EVERYONE!
If you could step into any career, what would it be and why?

4/09/2012

Get Lost in DeAnna Cameron's Dancing at the Chance





A chance for love...
A chance for fame...



New York City in 1907 is a kingdom of endless possibilities for anyone who dares to dream. The Gilded Age has ended, and immigrants fill the bustling streets. The glamour of Broadway lures those who desire the limelight—but only a few are fortunate enough to thrive in the lights of a city that casts long, dark, and merciless shadows…
Pepper MacClair and her mother arrived penniless in New York thirteen years ago, and their fortune has not changed. A dancer of fluid grace and motion, Pepper is still only one chorus girl among dozens, struggling for an opportunity to prove herself worthy of something bigger.
For now, Pepper dances at The Chance, a rundown venue long past its prime. It is not only Pepper’s workplace, where she has pushed her physical endurance to its limit, but also her home. And as the larger world changes around her and she is pulled into the intrigues of New York’s elite, it is her last hope, not only to fulfill her dream, but to fulfill her heart.




More About DeAnna Cameron


DeAnna Cameron spends much of her time dreaming up romantic historical adventures featuring feisty heroines destined for passion and fame—an endeavor that was not so useful when she was a newspaper reporter, and even less so when she became a magazine editor. Yet, she did her best to behave like a serious journalist during her 15-year career, which included stints in newsrooms and editorial offices of many fine Southern California publications. Those daydreams never went away, however, so it’s a good thing she landed in the thrilling world of fiction, where they can finally be put to use. These days, she is dreaming up new stories from her home in Orange County, Calif., where she lives with her family and a ninety-pound chocolate Lab.

Jillian: What’s your favorite fairy tale? 
DeAnna: I suppose Alice in Wonderland isn’t technically a fairy tale but it is my favorite children’s story. I love the upside-down world that Alice discovers and the journey that makes her grow and change as a person. And of course there’s the Mad Hatter, too. Who doesn’t love the Mad Hatter?

Jillian: What sound or noise do you love?
DeAnna: My 3-year-old daughter’s laugh.

Jillian: What’s your favorite movie of all time?
DeAnna: There are two that make me swoon every time I see them: A Room With a View and Say Anything. The second probably comes as no surprise to anyone who read my interview here last month about the reissue of THE BELLY DANCER. 

Jillian: Is writing or story-telling easier for you?
DeAnna: I would say the storytelling is easier. The story generally appears like a movie in my brain, with very broad brush strokes. I get it all down as quickly as I can while it’s there, and then I go back over the prose again and again to be sure the words are conveying to the reader all the emotion and mood and details I found so compelling.

Jillian: If you could interview one person (and it doesn’t have to be a writer) who would it be?
DeAnna: Does it have to be a living person? I hope not, because I’ve been re-reading some of Shakespeare’s classics and I would love to chat with him. I would love to know – once and for all – if he truly wrote everything we credit to him. I suppose that’s a bit of the curmudgeonly journalist in me wanting to believe, but still being a little skeptical. 

Jillian: What do you do to unwind and relax? 
DeAnna: Unwind? Relax? What’s that? No, seriously. If I have hours, I like to cook. Cajun-Creole food is a favorite. I can make a pretty great gumbo (in my own humble opinion…) and a not-too-shabby jambalaya. If I can steal away for just an hour or so, I’ll curl up with a book and get lost in a story.

Jillian: Which of your characters would you most like to invite to dinner, and why?
DeAnna: In DANCING AT THE CHANCE, there is a male impersonator named Em Charmaigne who is like a surrogate parent to Pepper MacClair, the heroine, and she is the brashest, sassiest, funniest, most outlandish character I have ever had the pleasure to meet on a page. I don’t even feel as if I invented her because she arrived in the story as a full-fledged individual. I could see her and hear her instantly, and I absolutely adore her. I would certainly love to spend more time with her.

Jillian: What’s your favorite kind of story to get lost in?
DeAnna: I love stories that are very different from my ordinary life. I suppose that’s what initially attracted me to historical fiction. I love to experience different eras and different places in the way you can only when you’re immersed in a novel and inside a character’s head. 

OK, here’s a question for you: What is your favorite kind of story to get lost in? One commenter selected at random will win a signed copy of DANCING AT THE CHANCE! 



For those who don’t win today’s giveaway, I have another one going on at my website. I’m giving away weekly prizes until April 30 and one lucky winner will receive an e-reader grand prize. Stop by www.DeAnnaCameron.com for details. You can also find me on Facebook (http://www.facebook.com/deanna.m.cameron) and Twitter at (http://www.twitter.com/DeAnnaMCameron)

4/07/2012

Get Lost with Romantic Suspense Author Lena Diaz

Today, GLIAS Readers, I’m thrilled to present my friend, and 2010 Golden Heart sister who, how shall I say this gently, likes to scare the bejeezus out of people.  She is one terrific romantic suspense/mystery/thriller author wrapped up into one.  So it’s my turn.  Just wait to she has to answer MY questions.  Please welcome, Lena Diaz.


(Note: Lena's cover quotes aren't out for Simon Says Die.  But check out what authors said about HE KILLS ME, HE KILLS ME NOT)
“Chilling from the first scene on. Diaz has crafted the kind of tense psychological thriller that’s impossible to put down.”
~National Bestselling Author Eileen Rendahl w/a Eileen Carr

“It’s all there. . .sizzling love scenes and a shivery good thrill ride.”
~Romantic Suspense Author Margaret Carroll

iT'S NOT A CHILD'S GAME WE'RE TALKING ABOUT.  ABOUT SIMONS SAYS....

Simon says: I'm watching. Simon says: I'm coming. Simon says: Die.

Madison McKinley knows someone is stalking her. The police tell her she's imagining things, and they're too busy trying to find the "Simon Says" killer to investigate. But day by day, hour by hour, Madison's terror grows stronger, and not even the return of FBI Special Agent Pierce Buchanan into her life can calm her fears. Besides, how can she ask Pierce for his help after the way she ended things between them?

Pierce still wants Madison's love, and his drive to protect her is more powerful than ever. He believes she's in danger, even if the cops don't. Finally, as more people start dying and the evidence mounts, the police turn their attention to Madison—as a suspect. Was Pierce a fool to trust her again, or are they both caught in a complex game that neither will survive?

Well, I'm scared, readers, How about you?  Let's have a little fun with RS Author Lena Diaz, AUTHOR OF SIMON SAYS DIE!

DONNELL:  Lena, are you a small town or big city girl?
LENA:  Thank you so much Donnell for having me on GLIAS. To answer your question, it depends on my mood. I was born in a small town, so small you could fit everyone from my hometown into a football stadium and still have room for about forty thousand more people. But my father was in the military, so we didn’t stay in one place very long. We moved. A lot. And we ended up in a very large city where I lived most of my adult life. Then, a few years ago, I moved to a small town again. Actually, it’s more like a subdivision-island surrounded by a sea of cows. And goats. And pigs. Most days, I’m a country girl, all about the small town life. Love it. Other days, when I need something at the store and have to drive thirty or forty minutes to get there . . . not so much. I’m all about convenience, so it’s a toss up.

DONNELL:  Favorite room in your house?

LENA:   Any room without a mirror.   
INTERVIEWER'S NOTE.  Are you kidding me? Lena is gorgeous, inside and out!
DONNELL:  What character would you run from if he showed up on your doorstep?

LENA: Only cowards run. I would use my seductive powers to distract the villain at my door while I reach behind my back for my car keys that are sitting on the decorative table in the foyer. While batting my lashes at the villain and darting my pink tongue out to moisten my lips and draw his attention, I quietly thread my keys through my fingers so they stick out from my closed fist (think Wolverine blades in Xmen). Then, just as I lean toward my villain and he reaches behind his back for his knife, I take the keys and (insert off-page gory carnage here).

DONNELL:  Have you ever used a rack in one of your stories?  Why or why not?  Have you got something against racks?

LENA: I’m insulted you even asked that question! OF COURSE I’ve used a rack in my stories. I’ve also used hot oil, stocks, and my personal favorite, a dunking chair. After all, who am I to second-guess time honored interrogation techniques? Unfortunately, (sigh), my editor doesn’t share my love of medieval implements. For some reason she doesn’t think they work in contemporary romantic suspense novels. Crazy, right? Some of my best torture . . . er . . . interrogation scenes have ended up on the cutting room floor.

DONNELL:  What’s the first thing people say to you when they learn you write suspense?

LENA: “What is romantic suspense?” Seriously - that’s what they say. I think most readers don’t know what our genre labels mean. So, if I’m explaining what I write, I tell them I write thrillers with romance in them. And then I list several well-known romantic suspense authors. That’s when the lightbulb goes on and they ‘get’ it.

DONNELL:  What’s in your refrigerator right now?

LENA:  Top shelf - insulin for my daughter. She has type 1 diabetes, which means she’s insulin dependent. Which means I really, really want a cure for this horrible disease. So all of you should go, run, right now, to your checkbook and write a check to the American Diabetes Association so we can find a cure. And go to www.BrendaNovak.com and support her annual diabetes auction. Okay, I’m thinking it doesn’t really matter now what’s in the rest of the refrigerator. Next question.

DONNELL:  You’re in a burning building, with terrorists plotting your demise on the outside.  Write your way out of this plot.

LENA:  Could you come up with something harder please? Geesh. Okay, well, if the building is on fire and the terrorists are on the outside, I’m actually assuming they ALREADY plotted my demise. That’s why the building is on fire. Duh. What they don’t know is that I had already figured out their plan before I went into the building. And since I’m dating a fireman who is also a chemist, I asked him last night to treat my hair, my skin, and my clothes with a special new invisible fire retardant. I also had my chemist-fireman-boyfriend add a special meat-flavored chemical to the fire hydrant in front of the building. And I timed my entry into the building so that the dog-walker, who passes in front of the building every day at noon, will be walking Mrs. Finkleman’s rottweilers right when the fire hoses begin spraying their meat-flavored water on the building. And because I was extra nice to my chemist-fireman-boyfriend last night, he turns the hose on the evil terrorists in the crowd. The rottweilers go crazy, pouncing on the terrorists, and I stroll out the front door of the burning building without so much as a singed eyebrow. My other boyfriend, the oh-so-handsome secret-agent who doesn’t mind sharing me with my chemist-fireman-boyfriend, arrests the evil terrorists and finds their dirty bomb hidden in the flux-capacitor of the Delorian sitting on the curb just down the block. I happily go home with both of my boyfriends as they take turns wooing me and trying to help me decide which one to choose as my life-long love. I plan on taking a very, very long time to make my decision.

DONNELL:  Ha!  Great answer, but brutal :) Have you ever played the game of Simon Says?  After your book, will you ever play again?

LENA: Well, I had this boyfriend once named Simon. And one day he told me to . . . um, never mind.  Nope, I can never play that game again, not after writing Simon Says Die. The game doesn’t turn out so well for the people who play. If you don’t do what Simon says, he kills you. But if you do what he says, you die. It’s a lose/lose kind of game. Me, I prefer win/win types of choices, like white chocolate or milk chocolate. Win/win.

DONNELL:  Coffee, tea, or something stronger?

LENA: The only way I can drink coffee is if I de-coffee it, meaning, add so much sugar and cream that it tastes like a hot milkshake. And the only thing tea is good for is throwing it into a harbor to protest high taxes. Something stronger? Like alcohol? I used to love drinking strawberry daiquiris once a week with friends while we watched episodes of Miami Vice (music by Huey Lewis and the News, Don Johnson - AWESOME show - but I digress.) Somewhere along the way, I developed a reaction to alcohol. If I drink, I get short of breath, have horrible abdominal pain, and end up in a fetal position for about thirty minutes. My doctor thought taking out my gall bladder would cure it. I trusted him and tried a post-gallbladder surgery margarita. Loved it! It was two-for-one night, so I started drinking a second margarita. Then . . . bam. Short of breath, pain, fetal position. So, I’ve discovered the joy of virgin daiquiris. And Diet Dr. Pepper. LOVE Diet Dr. Pepper.

DONNELL:  Are you organized?

LENA:  I say yes. My husband says no. I say he just doesn’t understand my organization strategy.

DONNELL:  What authors inspired your writing?

LENA: I admire other authors, want to be successful like them and create amazing stories like them. But they don’t inspire me. Readers inspire me. The idea of creating a story that a reader will love so much that it will become their favorite, that inspires me. The idea of creating a story someone would choose to take with them if they were stranded on a desert island, that inspires me. The idea of someone choosing my story above all others, that inspires me. Readers inspire me to write every day, to dig deeper and to create the best stories I can create.

DONNELL:  How many shoes do you have in your closet?

LENA: Too many to count, but I only have three pair (pairs?) that I wear. All the other shoes sit there looking pretty, tempting me to wear them, until I pick them up and remember how uncomfortable they were the last time I wore them. One day I’ll stop buying pretty, uncomfortable shoes that I’ll never wear.

DONNELL:  What does it mean to be happy?

LENA: Allow me to wax philosophic. (If it helps, pretend I’m one of those serious literary types for just a moment, instead of a genre fiction author.) Here’s my theory. Happiness is not a noun. It’s a verb. It’s not a state of being. It’s a journey. The pursuit of happiness is what makes us happy. Think about it. If you want something, and you work really hard to get it, once you get it you feel kind of let down, don’t you? You immediately want something else. Case in point, I want to be a New York Times bestseller. But if I become an NYT bestseller, it won’t make me happy, because I’ll immediately think of a new goal to pursue. But, hey, I could be wrong. I admit it. My entire theory could be based on unsound facts. So, to test my theory, I would appreciate it if everyone - EVERYONE - would please buy my books and put me on The List. Okay??? For scientific reasons only of course.

LENA, NOW IT’S YOUR TURN.  QUESTION FOR READERS.

I seriously had so much fun with these questions. You’re an awesome interviewer Donnell.

Ha!  If only I didn't screw up the date!   DO YOU HAVE A QUESTION FOR READERS?

LENA:  Here is my question for the readers. Do you prefer to know the identity of the villain up front, or do you prefer to figure it out along with the hero and heroine?

Dear Readers.  Your friendly GLIAS interviewer misread today's author's date. We will be re-running Lena Diaz's interview on April 7 & 8.  I will be giving away a $50 Barnes & Noble or Amazon gift certificate, so be sure to spread the word.   Comment (and yes, you may comment more than once) to be entered in the drawing on either April 3, 7 & 8.   Also, Lena will be giving away a digital book.  So answer Lena's question and let's talk about SIMON SAYS DIE. 

4/06/2012

THE 'DESIRE' OF BRENDA JACKSON


Brenda Jackson, NY Times and USA Today Bestselling author was born in Jacksonville, Florida.  She is a proud graduate of William Raines High School and earned a Bachelor of Science degree in Business Administration from Jacksonville University.  She worked in management for State Farm Insurance where she recently retired after thirty-seven years.  She married her high school sweetheart, Gerald, thirty-nine years ago and they have two sons, Gerald Jr. and Brandon, ages thirty-four and thirty-two, respectively.  
Her professional writing career began in 1995 with the release of her first book, Tonight and Forever.  Since then she has written over 75 titles, which includes a made-for-television movie by BET, One Special Moment.  She has received numerous national and literary awards and has made many trail-blazing accomplishments, which includes being the first African-American author to make the New York Times Bestseller’s List and the USA Today's Bestseller's List in the romance genre.

She was a 2012 NAACP Image Award Nominee for Outstanding Literary Fiction for her book, A Silken Thread, and was recently named RWA Nora Robert’s Lifetime Achievement Award recipient for 2012.

She has been featured in several magazines including Essence, Sister-2-Sister, Today’s Black Woman, Ebony, Romantic Times, Good Housekeeping, Woman’s Day and Cosmopolitan.

Inspired by her love of romance and dedication to her numerous readers, Brenda formed her own publishing company, the Madaris Publishing Company.  She is proud of her national book club – the Brenda Jackson Book Club – that has a membership of over  2,000 readers.  Brenda also joins her readers every two years for a Madaris/Westmoreland family reunion cruise to various destinations.

One of Brenda’s entities, Madaris Entertainment, has joined forces with her son Gerald’s production company, Five Alive Films, to bring viewers the best in romantic movies based on Brenda’s award winning books. 

She added a director’s hat to her list of accomplishment with her first movie titled, Truly Everlasting.  It was a huge success and has been picked up by Warner Brothers and will be in stores nationwide on May 15, 2012.  For more information visit, www.trulyeverlasting.com.
A listing of her books can be found on her website – www.brendajackson.net.  

FEELING THE HEAT
A brand-new Westmoreland novel.
Harlequin Desire
ISBN: ISBN-10: 0373837763
Their affair ended long ago. But when Dr. Micah Westmoreland must work with his old flame, the heat between them is undeniable. This time, he'll do whatever it takes to make her his.
READ MORE OF THE DESIRE
"Haven't you learned your lesson yet, Micah?" 


MEET BRENDA JACKSON
ANGI: How often to you get lost in a story?
BRENDA: All the time.  My stories are characters driven so I get absorbed ib my characters as I write the story. 

ANGI: What’s the first book you remember reading? 
BRENDA: I’ve read a lot of books, but the one I remember reading that made an impact on me was The Flame and the Flower by Kathleen E. Woodiwiss.  It impacted me so much that I named my youngest son after the hero (Brandon).  After that I read Shanna, and to this day it is my all time favorite book. Had I read that book first my son would be Ruark.  

ANGI: What’s your favorite “love” word?
BRENDA: Sweetie 

ANGI: Can you tell us about a real-life hero you’ve met?
BRENDA: My husband.  I consider him as my real-life hero. 

ANGI: What’s your favorite fairy tale?
BRENDA: Beauty and the Beast   

ANGI: What’s your favorite cartoon character?
BRENDA: Yogi Bear 

ANGI: What turns you off like nothing else?
BRENDA: Someone smacking on gum. 

ANGI: Where do you read and how often?
BRENDA: Due to my writing schedule, not as much as I like, but when I do read it’s by my inside pool.  I can sit by the pool at any time regardless of the weather. 

ANGI: What sound or noise do you love?
BRENDA: Sound of the ocean 

ANGI: Fairy Tale or Action Adventure?
BRENDA: Batman 

ANGI: What was the first story you remember writing?
BRENDA: The ones I used to write for my classmates when I was 14. 

ANGI: What’s your favorite movie of all time?
BRENDA: Sooner or Later 

ANGI: How is it working with hot guys and sexy women all day?
BRENDA: Great! 

ANGI’S GOTTA ASK:  It’s DESIRE week and we’re celebrating our teammate CAT SCHIELD’S release of Unfinished Business. So I’m going to play off her title and see if you’ve got any… “Unfinished Business.” Is there a character you’ve never given a story that just has to be shared?
BRENDA’S GOTTA ANSWER: Bane Westmoreland.  I get at least a couple of emails a day about his story.  It’s coming.  I’m giving him a chance to grow up and mature.
UP NEXT:


Courting Justice is my new Madaris novel that’s coming out in June 2012.

FIND BRENDA:
Website    Facebook    Twitter    YouTube    The Movie

BRENDA WILL BE DRAWING FOR A SURPRISE GIVE-AWAY, so leave your comment!
Note: Offer void where prohibited. Prizes will be mailed to North America addresses only unless specifically mentioned in the post. Odds of winning vary due to the number of entrants. Winners of drawings are responsible for checking this site in a timely manner. If prizes are not claimed in a timely manner, the author may not have a prize available. Get Lost In A Story cannot be responsible for an author's failure to mail the listed prize. GLIAS does not automatically pass email addresses to guest authors unless the commenter publicly posts their email address.

DON’T FORGET to FOLLOW us on Twitter (#GetLostStories) or LIKE us on Facebook to keep up with all our guest authors and their prizes. This weekend, Lena Diaz' interview will replay (due to technical difficulties on Tuesday). ~Angi
HAVE YOU GOT A QUESTION FOR BRENDA? Go for it!