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Category: Guest Posts

Guest Post & Giveaway: Lydia Dare, author of The Taming of the Wolf

[ 96 ] December 1, 2010

Please welcome Lydia Dare, author of The Taming of the Wolf! Check out our review here.

by Lydia Dare

Luxury. Just the sound of the word makes me think of living the good live. Dictionary.com has the following definition…

lux -u-ry

-noun

a material object, service, etc., conducive to sumptuous living, usually a delicacy,

elegance or refinement of living rather than a necessity.

Mmm. That sounds delightful.

I think this is why I write stories set in Regency England. I get to write about times when men were truly gentlemen and women (at least those I write about) had a more luxurious life than we do today. They had cooks, and housekeepers, butlers, footmen, maids (both chamber and scullery), valets, grooms, governesses, nurses, and my personal favorite – the lady’s maid.

*sigh*

Can you imagine someone’s entire job was to make you look good? To fix your hair to perfection. To make certain the three of four different gowns you’d don throughout the day were pressed and ready to go? Someone to keep you appraised of all the household gossip? (Having a teenager, I can only say that would be handy indeed.)

The rest of your day would be spent meeting with the housekeeper then shopping, calling on friends or having them call on you, deciding which social functions to attend, and practicing your witty repartee.

I think was born in the wrong era and the wrong socio-economic group, but I digress.

Earlier this year, I was fortune to hear Julia Quinn speak at a regional writers’ conference. She mentioned that recently she has begun to take cruises alone in order to write undisturbed. A light went off in my mind. A writing vacation! What a fabulous idea! And talk about luxury!

I am a big advocate of cruises. I’ve seen most of the Caribbean aboard one cruise ship or another; and a few years ago I was fortunate enough to visit more than a half dozen European countries during a two week cruise. Breath-taking ships. Gourmet food. Excellent service. Delicious drinks. And a different country every day.

That is the life. (And fairly reasonable as far as vacations go, but you can discuss that with your local travel agent – which if you’re cruising I highly recommend using instead of an internet service. And there I’ve gotten off topic again.)

Where was I again? Oh, right.

That is the life. In fact, in today’s day and age, cruising one of the few places one can aspire to the luxurious lifestyle of those long ago Regency Ladies. Cabin attendants. 24 hour room-service. Art shows. Non-stop social events of one sort or another. (I could go on and on, but the cruise lines aren’t paying me to sell their wares.)

I am definitely going to have to look into a writing retreat aboard a cruise ship. But I can’t imagine my family would be all right with me just abandoning them to take a cruise all by myself. I wonder how Julia Quinn convinced her family to let her it go alone. And now that I’m thinking about it, the fact she was able to swing this whole solo-cruise thing, she’s my new hero.

I can just imagine sitting poolside with my laptop. The happy island music. The warm sun. The never-ending piña-coladas. Where is my travel agent’s number?

About the author

Lydia Dare is the writing team of Tammy Falkner and Jodie Pearson. Both Tammy and Jodie are active members of the Heart of Carolina Romance Writers and live near Raleigh, North Carolina. They are working together on their next paranormal historical trilogy as Lydia Dare, which will be released by Sourcebooks Casablanca in 2011! For more information, please visit http://www.lydiadare.com/.

Giveaway:
I have an amazing giveaway for all bookaholics! One lucky reader will receive a set of Lydia Dare books including:

Mandatory entry: Please comment on this post with and tell me something you enjoyed about this guest post.

Extra entries (please post each entry separately, i.e. 2 posts for subscribing):
- Subscribe via e-mail, follow or subscribe to the feed. You must verify the subscriptions. (1 entry each)
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- Share this giveaway on a social network of your choice. Click the “Share/Save” button at the bottom of this post (1 entry each)
- Grab the Holiday Gift Guide button for your blog (right side bar, 2 entries)

This giveaway is open to U.S. and Canada residents only. Deadline to enter is midnight on December 20th.

Giveaway copies were provided free of any obligation by Sourcebooks Casablanca. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Guest Post & Giveaway: Helen Hollick, author of The Forever Queen

[ 173 ] November 12, 2010

Please welcome Helen Hollick, author of The Forever Queen! Check out our review here.

by Helen Hollick

My inspiration for The Forever Queen was Queen Emma herself. A relatively unknown Queen of England over-shadowed by the more famous Eleanor of Aquitaine, I wanted to redress the balance about this remarkable woman.

Wife to two Kings, Queen of England twice, and mother of two more kings, one of whom was Edward the Confessor. She survived what was probably a loveless marriage of alliance – she was betrothed to Æthelred II when she was probably little more than thirteen and had no respect for either husband or eldest son. Her other son was cruelly murdered; she faced exile twice, and rather than see England downtrodden beneath the heels of Danish – Viking – conquest, she offered herself in marriage in exchange for peace.

It was not martyrdom though, she got to keep her crown, a far more pleasing prospect than spending the rest of her life shut away in a nunnery.

When her son by her second marriage to Cnut (Canute – he of turning back the tide fame) was fighting for the right to the English throne, she commissioned a biography of her life – the first (surviving) Vitae of an English Queen.

Emma ruled as regent, attended the Council meetings of state and advised her second husband, Cnut, who eventually became more English than the English.

Admired and respected, she was every inch as glamorous and exciting as Eleanor of Aquitaine, but little is known about her because she reigned before the catalyst date of 1066 – the Battle of Hastings and the Norman Conquest of England.

[amazonify]1402240686[/amazonify]Duke William was her great nephew, Through his aunt he laid claim to England. But that, as they say, is another story. I Am the Chosen King in fact (Harold the King in the UK), which is to be published by Sourcebooks Landmark in March 2011.

I asked Helen what luxury meant to her:

My luxury? My bed and its deep, “memory foam” mattress. I have a hip problem and my neck and shoulders often ache of an evening after spending a day at the keyboard, so to snuggle down into that welcome, warm, softness is sheer luxury.

It supports all the bits of me that are beginning to rapidly sag southward, gives me a good night’s sleep, and in the morning I usually do not ache as much as the night before. The problem is getting out of it – the comfort zone is too alluring, and even with a wonderful bed and a good sleep I still do not have many smile-making dreams of Johnny Depp!

About the author

Helen Hollick lives in northeast London with her husband, daughter and a variety of pets, which include several horses, cats and two dogs. She has two major interests: Roman / Saxon Britain and the Golden Age of Piracy–the early eighteenth century. Sourcebooks Landmark will release the next chapter on Helen’s 1066 saga, I Am the Chosen King, in Spring 2011. For more information, please visit http://www.helenhollick.net/.

Giveaway:
I have 2 copies of The Forever Queen to give away, courtesy of Sourcebooks!

Mandatory entry: Please comment on this post with and tell me something you enjoyed about this guest post.

Extra entries (please post each entry separately, i.e. 2 posts for subscribing):
- Subscribe via e-mail, follow or subscribe to the feed. You must verify the subscriptions. (1 entry each)
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- Share this giveaway on a social network of your choice. Click the “Share/Save” button at the bottom of this post (1 entry each)
- Grab the Holiday Gift Guide button for your blog (right side bar, 2 entries)

This giveaway is open to U.S. and Canada residents only. Deadline to enter is midnight on November 26th.

Giveaway copies were provided free of any obligation by Sourcebooks Landmark. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Guest Post & Giveaway: Alice Eve Cohen, author of What I Thought I Knew

[ 118 ] November 8, 2010

Please welcome Alice Eve Cohen, author of a new memoir, What I Thought I Knew!

To learn more, check out Alice’s website or find her on Facebook.

by Alice Eve Cohen

At the age of fourty-four, after months of symptoms, doctor’s visits and inconclusive tests, I was raced to an emergency CAT scan for an abdominal tumor—which turned out not to be a tumor at all: I was six months pregnant. Somehow, my family, my marriage, my children and I all survived and thrived, despite (and maybe because of) the storm we weathered together. It took me a couple of years to regain my emotional footing after my unexpected and traumatic pregnancy. It took me much longer to write about it.

Zora Neale Hurston wrote, in her autobiography, “There is no agony like bearing an untold story inside you.” Bearing my own story inside me, keeping it a secret for years, was terribly painful. “This is the story you have to write, and you know it, Alice,” said my bullying subconscious. “Until you figure out how to write it, I won’t permit you to write anything.”

Because I am a performer—a solo theatre artist—I tried writing the story as a solo theatre piece, but I quickly discovered that I wasn’t ready to contemplate performing this story for an audience. It was too raw, too frightening. At that time, I could barely talk about the story, no less perform it. I shelved the project for years, and feared that I would never find my way back to it.

One day, quite unexpectedly, I started writing again—in absolute secrecy. I spent a year writing with a frenzied urgency, as if under a spell. I had to finish writing the story, or else—I didn’t know what else, but I was sure something bad would happen if I didn’t finish it. I became uncharacteristically superstitious: I was afraid that if I stopped writing for even a day, or if I told anybody I was writing this story, the spell would be broken, and I’d be cursed with that demonic and depressing stranglehold of writers block. For a year I didn’t even tell my husband that I was writing the book. That early writing process was something I needed to do [amazonify]0143117653[/amazonify]for myself, in order to make sense of what had happened, so much of which was still deeply troubling to me. Then I was able to edit, rewrite, and turn it into a book.

I wrote as honestly and candidly as I could about my personal odyssey. The comedy in my memoir helped me to write. My preferred survival mechanism in life is to find humor even in the most painful situations: I look for the story value in scary moments, for the absurdity in intolerable predicaments; I take great pleasure in self-mockery. Humor is an appealing unspoken contract with the reader. I want the humor to welcome readers into the story.

I imagine that the book will speak to anybody who has been through difficult times—which of course includes just about everyone. For years, I was unable to talk about my experience. Since writing the memoir, I have felt hugely relieved, and deeply gratified that readers have enjoyed the book and identified with it.

Giveaway:
I have 1 copy of What I Thought I Knew to give away!

Mandatory entry: Please comment on this post with and tell me something you enjoyed about this guest post.

Extra entries (please post each entry separately, i.e. 2 posts for subscribing):
- Subscribe via e-mail, follow or subscribe to the feed. You must verify the subscriptions. (1 entry each)
- Enter another current giveaway and tell me which one you entered (1 entry each)
- Share this giveaway on a social network of your choice. Click the “Share/Save” button at the bottom of this post (1 entry each)
- Grab the Holiday Gift Guide button for your blog (right side bar, 2 entries)

This giveaway is open to U.S. and Canada residents only. Deadline to enter is midnight on November 20th.

Giveaway copies were provided free of any obligation by BookSparks PR. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Guest Post & Giveaway: Falling Home by Karen White

[ 123 ] November 4, 2010

Please welcome Karen White, author of a new novel, Falling Home!

Diet Dr. Pepper and Other Secrets of My Success, by Karen White

I’ll admit it: I’m a creature of habit. I do the laundry every Thursday, change the linens every Monday, grocery shop every Sunday. Pilates every Monday, Wednesday and Saturday whether I’m still crippled from the last class or not. I have a similar routine for exfoliating my face, deep conditioning my hair, and grooming my dog (not at the same place).

As with my daily routines, my writing environment has to be a ‘certain way’ as well. I have a home office where I do the “business” side of writing. But for my creative writing, I use my sitting room upstairs—complete with fireplace, lots and lots of bookshelves, a coffee bar, and a refrigerator for my absolutely required Diet Dr. Pepper (my addiction while writing). I sit in a chair with an ottoman because I can’t write creatively while sitting at a desk. I recently acquired a larger chair because my dog, Quincy, apparently can’t stand to see me write a book alone and insists on Velcro-ing himself to my side whenever I sit in my writing chair. Hence the need for a wider one!

He’s been with me for the last six novels so I guess he’s become my good luck charm. And because he’s so good at what he does, I decided to reward him and put him in The House on Tradd Street and its sequel, The Girl On Legare Street. In the books his name has been changed to General Lee at Quincy’s request since it’s hard for him to answer fan mail without an opposable thumb.

All of this routine makes one think that my writing must be horribly organized, too. And that would be wrong. I follow no rules when it comes to writing. I don’t pre-write, or plan, or character sketch, or make calendars, or outline. I sit down and start to write. Period. It does make my life much more chaotic than it needs to be, and it also makes the writing process take so much longer since I have to spend a seemingly inordinate amount of time staring at an empty screen wishing I knew what was supposed to happen next.

So, in an attempt at self-preservation, I have tried to be more organized about it. I’ve written an outline, planned out each character, scene and ‘black moment.’ And ended up with just blah. It just doesn’t work for me. Maybe it’s because I’m a Gemini and seem to have a split personality where my writing is concerned. And in other aspects of my life, too, according to my family. But I digress.

[amazonify]0451231449[/amazonify]The good news is that I end up with a book I (and hopefully my readers, too) will love. The bad news is that I don’t get a lot of sleep. Which leads me to my biggest luxury: my naps. As a napper, I join such other illustrious nappers as Windston Churchill and Gandhi so it can’t be a bad thing, right? Like the rest of my life, it is scheduled and judiciously guarded. Even my kids know not to bother me during my naptime or fear being sent to an orphanage.

Recently, after 23 years of marriage, I upgraded from a queen-sized four-poster bed to a California king mahogany sleigh bed—with a Tempurpedic mattress. My naps have reached Nirvana status. And as I near a book deadline, I’ve been known to make my bed command central: me in the middle surrounded by my laptop, research books, iPhone, and, of course, Quincy. It makes naps easier that way, too, since I just have to slump over a bit before passing out from exhaustion.

No, there will be no pictures of me in the midst of deadline dementia. But as a special treat, here’s a picture of Quincy on “our” bed. And it doesn’t get any better than that.

Giveaway:
I have 1 copy of Falling Home to giveaway!

Mandatory entry: Please comment on this post with and tell me something you enjoyed about this guest post.

Extra entries (please post each entry separately, i.e. 2 posts for subscribing):
- Subscribe via e-mail, follow or subscribe to the feed. You must verify the subscriptions. (1 entry each)
- Enter another current giveaway and tell me which one you entered (1 entry each)
- Share this giveaway on a social network of your choice. Click the “Share/Save” button at the bottom of this post (1 entry each)
- Grab the Holiday Gift Guide button for your blog (right side bar, 2 entries)

This giveaway is open to U.S. and Canada residents only. Deadline to enter is midnight on November 20th.

Giveaway copies were provided free of any obligation by NAL Trade. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Guest Post & Giveaway: Phillipa Ashley, author of Dating Mr. December

[ 178 ] November 2, 2010

Please welcome Phillipa Ashley, author of the new novel Dating Mr. December!

by Phillipa Ashley

Luxury Reading asked me to tell you about my inspiration for Dating Mr. December. Talking about their book and characters is every writer’s luxury!

It’s even more fun for me because I’m making my debut in the US with a book that will always have a special place in my heart.

Dating Mr. December was my first novel (titled Decent Exposure here in the UK) and there was no question of where I was going to set my book – or who it was going to be about.

I know lots of US tourists visit the Lake District when they come to England. It’s a breathtakingly beautiful place crammed with mountains, waterfalls and stone cottages, complete with wood smoke curling from the chimneys. Oh, and we get lots of rain – hey, how else would you get all those lakes?

After spending many trips there, my husband and I decided to buy a holiday home. Eventually, after a two-year search we found an apartment in a 1920’s “gentleman’s residence.” It overlooks Lake Windermere and is within walking distance of Wordsworth’s cottage in Grasmere and the local mountain rescue base.

I’ve always had a ‘thing’ about mountain rescue teams. In the UK, they are all volunteers who don’t get a penny from the state. They give up their time and risk their lives just to help people like me who love to hike and climb in this beautiful place.

So when our local rescuing squad had an opening night to show off their new head quarters, guess who was first in the queue? I left full of awe at the dedication of the team and by the efforts they’d made to raise funds for their base, all for the benefit of others.

I also left with an idea for a novel which started like most books with a What If.

  • What if that team hadn’t got a new base and desperately needed the money?
  • What if someone helped them?
  • What if their ‘rescuer’ was an expert in PR, an outsider and city girl with shocking ideas?
  • And what if one member of the team didn’t want to be helped at all?

That’s how the hero and heroine were born.

The heroine, Emma Tremayne arrives in the small Lakeland community of Bannerdale from a glamorous PR job in London. She’s had to abandon all her hopes and dreams and start again – and helping the team is one way of finding a new role in the community. She may feel like a fish out of water but she’s ready to fight her corner with spark and passion.

She comes up against Will Tennant, a rugged bad boy who’s passionately committed to his community. Will’s not in need of rescuing by anyone. The last thing he wants is a smart, sophisticated woman who drives him crazy and worse, threatens to expose the hurt that lies beneath his tough-guy exterior.

Soon, both Emma and Will have to decide whether they’re ready to face the ultimate risk: each other.

The mountain rescue team helped with my research (the technical parts anyway, not the sexy bits!). I also had to face up to my fear of heights by abseiling (rappelling) off a cliff as research for one scene and raised £150 for the team.

Dating Mr. December took me a year to write and I had no idea if anyone would want to read it. But luckily for me, an agent in London loved it and sold it to a UK publisher. Last year, it was made into a US TV movie for Lifetime, called “The 12 Men of Christmas.”

Now, I’m thrilled that Sourcebooks have brought Emma and Will’s story to American readers. But none of it would have happened if I hadn’t fallen in love with a place and its people – and had a whole heap of fairy dust sprinkled my way.

To go along with the title of this blog, I asked Phillipa what luxury meant to her.

The ultimate in luxury for me is spending time with my husband and daughter (who lives away from home, studying for a PhD.) If we were all together, body boarding on a wild Cornish beach or striding over a Lakeland fell, I wouldn’t ask for anything else.

Apart from a large latte and a slice of cake afterwards that is!

About the author

Phillipa Ashley studied English Language and Literature at Oxford before becoming a freelance copywriter and journalist. Dating Mr. December (called Decent Exposure in the UK) was the basis of last year’s Lifetime TV Movie “The 12 Men of Christmas.” A frequent guest on BBC national, local and independent radio on all matters romantic, she lives with her husband and daughter in Staffordshire, UK. For more information, please visit http://phillipa-ashley.com, follower her on Twitter or find her on Facebook!

Giveaway:
I have 2 copies of Dating Mr. December to give away, courtesy of Sourcebooks!

Mandatory entry: Please comment on this post with and tell me something you enjoyed about this guest post.

Extra entries (please post each entry separately, i.e. 2 posts for subscribing):
- Subscribe via e-mail, follow or subscribe to the feed. You must verify the subscriptions. (1 entry each)
- Enter another current giveaway and tell me which one you entered (1 entry each)
- Share this giveaway on a social network of your choice. Click the “Share/Save” button at the bottom of this post (1 entry each)
- Grab the Holiday Gift Guide button for your blog (right side bar, 2 entries)

This giveaway is open to U.S. and Canada residents only. Deadline to enter is midnight on November 20th.

Giveaway copies were provided free of any obligation by Sourcebooks Landmark. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

Beat Holiday Stress by Doing More!

[ 5 ] October 31, 2010
Beat Holiday Stress by Doing More!

by Peggy Hall

The change of seasons often brings a change of heart: one minute we’re barefoot and carefree, soaking up our favorite plot lines as we soak up the sun; the next, we’re fretting over holiday to-do lists, instead of digging into the current best-seller!

Before you think you need to take some things off your to-do list, consider actually creating another list of things to do.

That’s right – only this time, it’s a to-do list that focuses on you!

You see, when you spend some time recharging your own batteries, you actually increase your physical energy and mental clarity so that you can more calmly and effortlessly tackle the challenges of the season.

Here are a few easy, fun and inexpensive “to do’s” that truly nourish mind, body and soul:

1. Set aside a specific time each day to curl up with a good book (of course) – along with a cozy cup of Chai Cider.

Read a paragraph, then sip and savor the cider, which naturally calms and soothes the nervous system.

2. Do something out of the ordinary, like sit in a different chair, take in a new view or indulge in a new flavor of Oregon Chai. Getting out of the typical routine really wakes up the brain cells and can leave you even more refreshed than just taking a nap!

3. Experiment in the kitchen with a new, fun recipe. Imagine the response you’ll get when you bring Chai Candied Yams to the table…or how about preparing homemade Chai Biscotti? The key is to spend this time in a relaxed manner, creating something that appeals to you.

4. Connect with your “fans” – you know, the friends who make you feel terrific. But instead of doing so electronically, actually pick up the phone and express your gratitude “in person” instead of electronically. That gesture in and of itself can begin a ripple of gratitude that will spread to all during the holiday season!

For more smart, simple secrets for healthy living, claim your free wellness tips from mind/body wellness expert Peggy Hall!

About Peggy Hall

Peggy Hall is an acclaimed mind and body wellness expert who has helped thousands of women discover greater health and well-being. She is recognized as an acclaimed yoga instructor, personal trainer, nutritional therapist, published author and sought-after speaker. Through her variety of experience, Peggy recognizes the importance of taking Me Time to maintain focus and balance in our everyday lives.

Peggy is the featured health and wellness expert for the ABC Radio Network and a contributing writer for Clean Eating magazine. She has also been featured in numerous publications, including USA TODAY, The Los Angeles Times, Surfer, Yoga Journal, SELF, Men’s Journal and more.

With her upbeat attitude and positive energy, Peggy inspires a passion for healthy living that resonates strongly with the Oregon Chai brand.

If you are interested in doing a media interview with Peggy Hall please contact Heather Gjerde, hgjerde@hiebing.com, 608.268.4369.

Guest Post: Lauren Willig

[ 8 ] October 19, 2010

Please welcome Lauren Willig, author of The Secret History of the Pink Carnation, which started her bestselling series!

Lauren Willig’s amazing debut novel is now available in mass market paperback. You can check out our review of one of Willig’s books, The Betrayal of the Blood Lily, here.

by Lauren Willig

The two most dangerous words in the English language aren’t “why not?” or “refill, please!”. They’re “what if?”

What if always gets me into trouble.

I blame what if for my writing career. For as far back as I can remember, my automatic reaction to any story was “what if?” What if Scarlett O’Hara had a Northern best friend (who looked suspiciously like me) who wound up with Rhett Butler’s equally dashing blockader brother, Charles Butler? What if a female disguised as a boy tried to join the Three Musketeers? What if the Berenstein Bears left the tree house and moved to an apartment in New York?

As a small child, I drove the adults around me crazy, suggesting alternate plots and counter-plots. As I grew older, I entertained myself for endless hours spinning my fancies into fiction, taking all my what ifs and translating them into character and plot.

What if led me straight to The Secret History of the Pink Carnation.

It was the spring of 2001. I was a disgruntled second year graduate student in the Harvard history department, burned out on caffeine and footnotes. (Author’s note: there are two basic laws of grad school: one must be disgruntled and one must drink black coffee. Whether there is any correlation between these two items is undoubtedly being examined in a dissertation by a disgruntled grad student hyped up on too much black coffee). After two years of being buried in the basement of Widener Library, squinting at microfilm, reading Seminal Texts, and wondering whether that coffee splotch on my skirt could be passed off as a pattern, I had just passed my Oral Exams. In celebration, I gave myself an evening away from the footnotes to enjoy some haute grad school cuisine (a hot dog with squirty cheese) and watch one of my favorite guilty pleasures: the Anthony Andrews Scarlet Pimpernel.

[amazonify]0451413016[/amazonify]For those who haven’t seen this seminal work, it’s the ultimate in swash and buckle. Fool by day, man of mystery by night, Sir Percy Blakeney spirits aristocrats from the jaws of the guillotine, thwarting the forces of revolutionary France. It was all quite satisfying (there’s nothing like a good rendition of “They seek him here, they seek him there”)—until my what if antennae started quivering. Yes, the story was all very well as it was, but, what if you gave your debonair English spy a real problem? Those French operatives, like Chauvelin, are always remarkably insignificant adversaries, rather like those Star Wars storm troopers who never manage to shoot straight.

What if one were to take a dashing English spy, used to his missions always going as planned and his minions always obeying without question, and throw into his path the ultimate object of destruction: an attractive and spirited young lady. He would never know what hit him. Ha! I wolfed down the rest of my hotdog and raced for the computer. And thus The Secret History of the Pink Carnation was born. My heroine acquired a quirky chaperone, my hero acquired a very noisy and involved family. A whole world of characters, side characters, plots, and subplots blazed into being, all on the strength of that one what if.

Once you open the door to what if, there’s just no stopping it. Since writing the first Pink Carnation book, “what if” has led me to colonial India (what if you took a rebellious English debutante and drop her in the midst of intrigue in Hyderabad in 1804), the court of George III (what if his madness was caused not by hereditary illness, but foul play?), and, most recently, in The Mischief of the Mistletoe, to none other than the great Jane Austen. What if the reason Austen didn’t finish the Watsons wasn’t grief over her father’s death, but—never mind. Spoilers!

Now that I’m done with that, what if….

For more on Lauren Willig, visit www.laurenwillig.com or her Facebook page.

Blog Tour: Stiltsville by Susanna Daniel

[ 9 ] October 6, 2010

Please join Susanna Daniel, author of Stiltsville, as she tours the blogosphere with TLC Book Tours!

Introduction by Susanna Daniel, If the Writing Is Going Well

I would love to say that I conceived of my debut novel, Stiltsville, in some dreamy and dramatic way — while taking a walk on a beach, for example, or riding a horse through a dark forest. But really, the idea for the novel sort of evolved in my mind, bit by bit, until it was more or less a fact of life and not a decision at all, the way a baby grows into a toddler.

What happened was this: I wrote a short story — only 15 pages — about a woman and her husband and their daughter and something that happens to them during a weekend that they spend at this place I know, Stiltsville. I submitted the story to a few literary journals and showed it to an agent who visited my graduate program. She said, “I think you have more to say about this family.” I shrugged — maybe, maybe not. The story was published in an anthology and won me a fellowship at the University of Madison, where I still live. This was ten years ago.

That story is not in my novel. But two other stories I wrote about this family, during my time in graduate school, are included. I didn’t start writing these stories with the notion of writing a novel in mind, but by the time I finished them, I think I knew that agent was right: I had more to say.

It’s a little embarrassing to admit that the idea for one’s novel came from someone else — a stranger, to boot — but it’s true. As for the second novel, which I’m working on now, it’s my own idea.

However, I’ve been asked several times if I might write a sequel to Stiltsville, and I have to say that it’s something I’m considering seriously. I love my narrator. She’s not me and she’s not my mother, though she has elements of us both — she’s a relic, really, of a different era, and as she ages she becomes more astute and more fiercely protective of her family and friends. This fierceness in her, which is only starting to come out by the end of Stiltsville, is what I’d like to explore further. Her life is so bound up in her marriage, that I wonder: how does she return, after it’s over, to the land of the living? What pulls her back?

I write in the mornings after dropping off my son at daycare. I write for about four hours at a time, until my growling stomach forces me to stop. It’s not easy for me to return after lunch — and often I fail to do so — so I’ve learned to put off lunch as long as possible. After lunch, I either revise or run errands and clean my house, activities that most of the time I find far more pleasurable than writing. But nothing is as rewarding.

The problem with writing as a rewarding activity, though, is that if it’s not going well, this infects every aspect of my life, from my marriage to my parenting to my friendships to my exercise regimen. My brother says, “If you work out, everything else will, too.” For me, the saying it, “If the writing’s going well, everything else will, too.”

Reviewed by Caitlin B.

This was my first encounter with Susanna Daniel and I’m confident it won’t be the last. Disarming, delicate, discrete are all words used by critics to describe her Stiltsville and all ring true. This work of fiction is heartwarming in the way only a true story can be; it reads like a memoir…but not the sort which relies on melodrama to make good. It is a well-paced exploration of intimacy, full of vulnerability and tenderness, and an exceptionally engaging portrait of the Bay of Biscayne in South Florida.

The novel doesn’t rely on a very large cast of characters, leaving room for Daniel to fully mine the inner lives of Frances Ellerby (the narrator) and, to some extent, her husband Dennis DuVal. Frances is an inviting narrator; her voice is stirringly authentic. Dennis is a dreamer but also a devoted man. The extended cast consists of friends made in Miami, the in-laws, and their own little family. Every female narrator needs a good girlfriend and there was a great deal of realism in their relationship. Frances and her friend Marse care deeply for one another in spite of so much time spent apart.

It was the novel’s focus on long-term relationships that immediately drew me. We all desire the profound intimacy which comes with knowing someone for more than a few years. The couple, their friends, and family are in it for the long haul, even in doldrums and rough seas. Even the family stilthouse has a singular relationship with each major character; it becomes as much as oasis for the reader as the characters. That house serves as the novel’s first object lesson in longevity: yes, it will end, but it’s worth spending all the time you can in the midst of it.

The second is the major plot twist. No spoilers here; don’t worry. Still, the author deserves great praise for such a graceful approach to Frances and Dennis after they receive the news that changes their lives. She writes about the resulting challenges with such care that the tremendous difficulty of her craft is well-disguised. Her prose reads so organically I was reluctant to finally reach the end. Stiltsville is a lovely meditation on the ever-changing nature of our relationships – definitely a recommended read!

Check out some very cool stilt houses in Biscayne Bay!

Caitlin is a fiction writer who also dabbles in poetry, creative nonfiction and acrylic painting. When not reading, she enjoys hiking, cooking and spending time with friends and pets. She earned her B.A. in English from the University of Portland and currently resides in Oregon.

Review and giveaway copies were provided free of any obligation by Harper. No monetary or any other form of compensation was received.

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