Author Interview – Liza O’Connor

Fellow Sci-Fi Romance Brigade author Liza O’Connor recently let me crash her Multi-Verse blog, and now I have her over to chat about her paranormal romance Ghost Lover. Between March 21-23 (i.e. starting today), it will be on sale for $1.99 on Amazon.com (which is a bargain, if I do say so myself). And if you have Prime, you can even borrow it. 

Alright, let’s dig into this irresistible story (and look at all the pretty pictures)!

1. Hi Liza, and thanks so much for dropping by. Is it true that your book has, not one, but actually two sexy British hunks? Can you tell me more about them?

1st, let me discuss the younger, bad boy of the two brothers: Brendon

You probably won’t like him right off because he steals Senna’s money, causing her rent check to bounce, resulting in her being evicted from her slum apartment. He didn’t need the money. He did it to force her into going to England with him so they can marry. You’ll want to strangle the amoral fellow on more than one occasion, but eventually you’ll grow to love him. It just takes time.

Brendon

Brendon

Same goes for the older brother: Gar

Once Gar discovers what a great person Senna is and starts being nice to her, you’ll fall in love with him. At first, he’s way too grumpy and judgmental. 

Which means the first thing you and Senna will fall in love with is the ghost cat,

Gar

Gar

Oh, by this way, this is Senna

The ghost cat, Mr. Finch, is invisible.

Senna

Senna

2. That was exactly my second question. Does this adorable bundle of fur play a significant role? How did he come to be?

Mr. Finch is an ocelot that Lassier bought from a sailor back in the 15th century. The cat gave his life in battle saving Lassier, so Lassier buried him in the family cemetery. Anyone buried in this soil would becomes ghost for eternity. Turns out it works for cats too. 

Here are pictures that Lassier painted of Mr. Finch when a kitten and later in his prime:

Mr. Finch

Mr. Finch

 Mr. Finch provides comfort to Senna throughout her stay in England, as does Lassier the ghost, but the ocelot is cooler.

3. A birdie tells me this story is set in a castle! Can you tell me a bit more about it? Is it haunted?

Castle Durran

Castle Durran

Castle Durran haunted? Never. Well, there are a few fellows in the dungeon which are ghost-chained for eternity, but the other 90 plus ghosts who occupy the castle never bother anyone. That’s probably Gar’s doing. He gets very annoyed if any of the ghost dare appear. So most of them just float about as globes of light. Materializing is too hard if everyone is just going to ignore or yell at you. 

Here are the ghosts gathering at Christmas

Here are the ghosts gathering at Christmas

Now, Lassier and Mr. Finch are an entirely different matter. Gar has no control over Mr. Finch. The cat, while invisible, is still forty pounds of muscle. He loves to lay on Gar’s feet to annoy him. He purrs a lot, and when Gar is especially rude, he’ll break something Gar likes.

Lassier comforting Senna

Lassier comforting Senna

Lassier can materialize into what appears and feels like a real man, and he can take any face he wants in the process. He can also body nap Gar’s body and make love to Senna. He prefers the latter because in an actual body, sex is far more enjoyable.

4. Could you share a snippet from when Senna first meets Gar.

That would be when they arrived at Heathrow. Gar didn’t say much in the airport, so let’s join them in limo, shall we?


“Since I’ve obliged you, perhaps you will reciprocate by answering some questions.” Gar’s glare locked in on Senna’s large green eyes. 

“What do you want to know?” the young woman asked cautiously, her eyes narrowing until she resembled a feral cat.

He’d never liked cats--sneaky and untrustworthy creatures.

“I understand you plan to marry my brother.”

“That depends.”

“On what?”

“On if he really has a half-million coming to him when he marries.”

Had she really come out and declared herself a money-loving gold digger? “You’re marrying my brother to get your hands on half a million?” he clarified.

“Does he have such a sum?” she asked most earnestly.

Gar stared at his brother.

“Would you please tell her I have the money coming to me?” Ditz requested, his voice almost pleading.

It reminded him of the time Ditz lied to their parents about getting a star on his work paper. He’d pleaded with Gar to help him make it true by going to a store and buying one. Gar had refused on ethical grounds. When Ditz failed to present a star crested paper, their father beat him until he couldn’t sit for a full week.

“Ditz has said amount in his trust account,” Gar said, careful in his phrasing.

She noticeably relaxed and smiled in appreciation at Ditz.

“You seem relieved Miss Smith.”

“I am. I’ve been afraid Brendon fabricated the money so I would sell all my possessions. He believes they were dragging me down.”

“They were,” Brendon said.

“Maybe.”

Gar didn’t give a damn about her possessions. What he cared about were Ditz’s possessions, specifically his fortune. He did not want this gold-digger getting her hands on it.

Leaning forward, he asked, “Is this a new cultural difference with Americans, or are you abnormally mercenary?” He shook his head in disgust. “Isn’t it still customary to at least pretend to love the man you plan to suck dry?”

Senna’s face flushed crimson. “I don’t plan to suck anything.”

“What exactly is your plan?” He marveled this girl didn’t seem to realize how outrageous she sounded.


5. I know you’re busy with a ton of different projects, so I’ll let you run off with this last question. How did you get your start as an author?

I spent years happily writing novels, sending them off to critters and rewriting them. I just kept honing my craft and never submitted anything for publication. The number of full length, unpublished novels I’ve written is a bit embarrassing. 

Then one day I wrote Saving Casey. A new critter declared the book unpublishable based solely on the blurb she read. I was outraged. I sent it off to one of my critters who happens to be a very successful author: Rebecca Royce. She actually read the book, not just the blurb, and demanded I publish it. So I did. The third publisher I sent it to offered me a contract.

The second book I sent out was accepted by the first publisher I sent it to. The book was Ghost Lover.  Only it wouldn’t be published for a year, so I decided to try my hand at independent publishing so people wouldn’t forget who I was between my two books. To give inde-publishing a fair shot, I used the funniest book I’ve ever written, Worst Week Ever. It was part of a series called A Long Road to Love that follows a young woman though her search for love during the first three books of the series. In May the fourth book, which is Trent’s redemption, will come out. It’s titled Climbing out of Hell.  

It turns out I love inde-publishing, and my books do better with me in charge of the marketing.

Also for this year, I plan to publish a humorous Late Victorian Mystery Series. Of all the books I’ve written, my critters love this series the best, and so do I. 

5 b. Did you think you’d end up with such an impressive backlist when you first started?

Honestly, I expected to have more books published. I hadn’t realized how slow the publishing process remains. Between initial submission and publication, it can easily take two years. 

The submission process is the biggest issue. Publishers can take up to three months to decide if your book is right for them, if they reject it, then you have to submit to someone else who inevitably wants a synopsis of a different length. 

That is one of the many things I love about inde-publishing. I never make myself write a synopsis and I’ll let myself know in days if I want to publish the book next.

I’d like to thank Liza again for dropping by. Remember, you can get her book on sale for half price ($1.99).  For more information about the book and author, just scroll down. Comments are always much appreciated.

Ghostlover try 3.jpg

Ghost Lover

Two sexy English brothers.

One irresistible ghost.

Who would you choose as your lover

Completely broke and with a criminal record to boot, Senna Smith is one day from eviction from her apartment when Brendon, her promiscuous roommate from London, suggests she go to England, marry him, and manage his fortune. With few other options, she agrees to an open marriage. But she’ll never, ever, have sex with him, knowing if she falls in love with him, he’ll break her heart.

As trustee of Brendon’s family fortune, there is no way Brendon’s older brother, Garrison Durran, is going to let him marry a self-professed American gold-digger. As Senna tries to embrace castle life and English society for Brendon’s sake, Gar discovers Senna is the perfect woman for him--beautiful and intelligent, kind and caring. Now, if she wasn’t already engaged to his brother…

The ancestral ghost of Durran Castle has to intervene if the Durran brothers have any chance of an heir. He can’t leave them to fix matters on their own. They are useless buggers when it comes to love. As counselor to Gar, matchmaker for Brendon, and lover to Senna, a ghost’s work is never done. 

CONTENT WARNING: Allergy warning: Ghost cat in book.

Available at Amazon ($1.99 for a Limited Time!)

About Liza O'Connor

Liza lives in Denville, NJ with her dog, Jess. They hike in fabulous woods every day, rain or shine, sleet or snow. Having an adventurous nature, she learned to fly small Cessnas in NJ, hang-glide in New Zealand, kayak in Pennsylvania, ski in New York, scuba dive with great white sharks in Australia, dig up dinosaur bones in Montana, sky dive in Indiana, and raft a class four river in Tasmania. She’s an avid gardener, amateur photographer, and dabbler in watercolors and graphic arts. Yet through her entire life, her first love has and always will be writing novels. She loves to create interesting characters, set them loose, and scribe what happens.

Blog and Website | Facebook | Twitter

Author Interview – Lori L. Clark

THKWTHWFRONT.jpg

I’m delighted to welcome Lori to my blog today. She’s a writer of New Adult romances (yes, I like to keep things different around here), and she has a new book to chat about. A contemporary romance, The Heart Knows What the Heart Wants was released earlier this month.  

I'm going to grill her about it in just a sec. But first, I probably should tell you Lori's running a giveaway!


Giveaway

Click on the link below for details on how you can win a $10 Amazon Gift Card and other goodies:

Rafflecopter


1. Hi Lori. Since this is the first time I’m interviewing a new adult writer, I’ll let you do the honors. What are the hallmarks of this sub genre? Where does it fit between young adult and adult?

I used to read a lot of YA books and I guess after reading my first Colleen Hoover book, I thought, "Wow! This is like YA only more mature." Which is how I believe NA started. I think it was supposed to be a genre between YA and Adult that was meant for the college years. It was more of an Age classification than anything.

Now, I'm seeing the genre go off in a different direction than perhaps it was when I first became aware of it. Technically, it's an age group. I think 18-25 are the ages that fit in the NA genre.

Somewhere along the way, it's been misconceived to mean that if the book isn't about a bad boy with tattoos, if it isn't about a rich man taking in a naive woman to be his forever-after, if it isn't about how many times between the first paragraph and last the main characters can do the nasty, then some readers believe it's not true NA.

Think "age group."

2. Finding romances with a heroine who’s older than the hero is rarer than one might think. What are some of the advantages of this age dynamic?

Personally, I have a preference for older women/younger men relationships. I read Jane's Melody by Ryan Winfield and fell in love with the story. I think that women in real life who prefer younger men need to have their own category of books to choose from!

Statistically, women outlive men. So, us mature women need to find a man about 10 years younger so we have a mate for life. At least that's my thinking on the subject.

3. Estelle and Shane seem to have very different personalities. Is this a case of opposites attract?

She's into metaphysical aspects of life. Astrology, following your intuition, etc. He's a bit more of a logical, science-driving person. While on the surface it might seem that they are from two completely different planets... it's their personalities that click on so many levels. Their banter back and forth was a lot of fun to write. So, I guess, initially, it might seem that these two were nothing alike. But, once they connect, they're more alike than one might think.

4. Are you at liberty to share Estelle and Shane’s first kiss?

Here's a snippet which reveals their first kiss. It's fun, because, Estelle calls herself "Star."

He cupped her face with his hands and kissed her, just a light brush of his lips across hers at first. She wrapped her arms around his neck and stepped closer to him, pressing her body against the length of his. The passion she felt for him was real and made her knees go weak.

His tongue found its way between her lips, and she sucked it deeper as her hands fisted in the front of his sweatshirt. Her heartbeat pounded in her ears as she imagined his tongue making love to her mouth.

It was Shane who broke their kiss first. He rested his forehead against hers. "I'm pretty sure I just saw stars," he panted.

5. I’ll let you off with one last question. How did you get your start as an author? What was your path to publication like?

I started getting interested in writing after reading the Twilight series. I know it certainly re-ignited my reading habit. I read, read, read, and decided to try my hand at writing my own book. I got serious in 2009 when I successfully finished NANOWRIMO.

It's been fun, it's been -- and still is -- a learning curve. I would probably go back and read my first stuff now and think, "Oh this is awful!" LOL

Since I self-publish, I think it's probably more fun for me than if I was receiving rejection letter after rejection letter. I'm free to write and publish when and what I want for now.

I does  sound more fun! What I wouldn't give to never have to bite my nails and constantly hit the refresh button? 

Since she has a book to promote, I’ll let Lori run off to her next engagement. For more information about the book and author, just scroll down.

Thanks for having me! It's been fun. Great questions!

1958541_260570807446133_684633456_n.jpg

The Heart Knows What the Heart Wants

Estelle "Star" Falconé, a thirty-year-old tattooed bartender, was once a free-spirited dreamer who dabbled in astrology for fun and secretly dreamed of becoming a rock-star some day.

Twenty-one-year-old Shane Harper was once the star of his high school basketball team. With a full ride scholarship, his dream was to play college basketball and study planetary science. When a tragic car accident permanently sidelines his basketball career, college is out of the question. 

Sparks fly when their two worlds collide.

Can a relationship survive between a thirty-year-old starry-eyed woman who's on the run from an extremely dangerous man, and a twenty-one-year-old science guy who's hell-bent on protecting her at all cost?

***Caution*** for mature readers. Contains graphic violence including rape. This is a complete, standalone novel.

Amazon | GoodReads

authorLLC for bio.jpg

About Lori L. Clark

Lori L. Clark was born in Iowa, where she spent the first forty-six years of her life. In 2007, she loaded up a moving van and relocated to Missouri, where she currently resides. Lori's only child is a very spoiled Min Pin named Barkley. When not writing, she reads and runs. She completed her first half marathon at the age of fifty.

In 2009, after participating in NANOWRIMO, she began to take seriously the voices in her head. Two New Adult contemporary romance novels, Different Roads, and I Breathe You, were published in 2013, and showed early success. The Heart Knows What the Heart Wants is set to release in March 2014, and has her venturing into the realms of Romantic Suspense.

Lori is a member of Savvy Authors, the St. Louis Writers Guild, and Romance Writers of America.

Website | Book Review Blog | Facebook | Twitter | GoodReads | Pinterest | Amazon

Author Interview - Jessie Clever

A Countess Most Daring Book 3.jpg

Long before I fell in love with the paranormal, I was a huge fan of regency romances. It so happens that Julia Quinn and Suzanne Enoch are still two of my favorite authors. There’s just something swoon-worthy about a dashing Earl, a scowling Duke, and the ladies who bring them to their knees. 

As such, I’m delighted to welcome Jessie Clever to my humble abode. She’s here to chat about A Countess Most Daring, which was released just last month. Book Three in her Spy Series, it matches Katharine Cavanaugh, the Countess of Stirling, with American mercenary Mathew Thatcher.  I can’t wait to find out more!

 

1.  Let’s start with the basics. How would you define a regency romance to someone who hasn’t read one before? Who would you consider to be an iconic author in the genre?

What I love about Regency romance is that the definition continues to change.  The Regency era in England occured between 1811 and 1820, and Regency romances usually include the trials and tribulations of titled gentlemen and ladies in the strictures of society.  But what I love about Regencies is that as a writer, I'm giving this incredibly structured time period where I am challenged to defy that order.  Julia Quinn is a great example of an iconic author in this genre, but as I mentioned before, the definition of this genre is always changing, and I hope my work in the Spy Series will continue to be a part of that change.

2. Change is definitely a good thing. Okay, next question. The British War Office plays a significant role in your entire Spy Series. What types of secrets were they uncovering back in the day? How would their methods compare to the modern day CIA or NSA?

Funny thing about the British War Office, spies in the Regency period didn't actually report to the War Office.  (Spies actually reported to the Home Office, but that just does not sound as cool!)  Regency romances started the tradition of having spies report to the War Office, so the tradition stuck, and there's no turning back!  Spies played a different role during this time period than modern day spies in that they were more influencers rather than information gatherers.  William J. Oliver is a good example of this.  He was in debtors prison untilt the Home Office recruited him to put pressure on the Luddites, aan artisan movement that developed in the Industrial Revolution.  And this was domestic unrest, so it would be like the NSA sending in someone to stop people who rally against GMOs in food in the US.  Spies in the Regency period would need to do this without smartphones, the internet, or drones!    

3. Judging from the white-gloved hand and high neckline, I would guess there are lots of constraints and expectations associated to being a Countess. Could you tell us a bit more about them?

In A Countess Most Daring, the heroine's title of Countess is actually a cover given to her by the British War Office., and even more, her cover is that she is a widowed countess.  So being titled and widowed, she actually gets a lot of freedom that she otherwise wouldn't have.  A title comes with a lot of expectations that one behave and act in a certain way, but a title also gives one access to situations that otherwise would be out of one's reach.  In Kate's circumstances, the title works to her advantage.

4. How intriguing. I love spy stories. Okay, this might seem shallow, but the first thing about your cover that caught my eye is the array of very nice abs. Can you tell us how Mathew Thatcher got to be so … for lack of a better word, “cut”?

Matthew Thatcher is a farm boy by heritage.  He earned those muscles through hard labor!

5. I must now resist the urge to swoon. One last question before I let you go—as a newbie author, I love to hear how everyone else got into the business. When did you decide to be an author? What was your path to publication?

I decided to be a writer when my dad told me I couldn't be Indiana Jones.  If I couldn't live the adventure, I was going to write it.  I started writing for publication my freshman year of college, and after getting several promising responses from editors, I decided to publish my first work myself.  I love the control that self-publishing offers and the close connection with my readers.  I wouldn't have it any other way!

Since Jessie has a new release to promote, I’ll allow her to run off. For more information about the book and author, continue to scroll down. As always, comments are very much appreciated. 

A Countess Most Daring

In Book Two of the Spy Series, For Love of the Earl, two agents for the War Office in search of Alec and Sarah’s kidnappers boarded a ship for unknown destinations. In Book Three, we find out what happened to them. 

Katharine Cavanaugh, the Countess of Stirling, has always lived according to the expectations of her heritage. American mercenary Matthew Thatcher has spent his life running away from every expectation he has for himself. But when their latest mission from the British War Office goes wrong, trapping them behind enemy lines, they must decide if they dare to realize the greatest expectation of all: the expectation of love.

Buy LinksAmazonBarnes & Noble | All Romance eBooksKobo

JessieClever.jpg

About Jessie Clever

In the second grade, Jessie began a story about a duck and a lost ring.  Two harrowing pages of wide ruled notebook paper later, the ring was found.  And Jessie has been writing ever since.

Earning her degree in English with a Creative Writing Honors at the University at Albany, Jessie completed her first novella, Shake Down Your Ashes, a historical fictive memoir.  She then went on to experiment in journalism, copy writing and public relations communications.  Focusing her writing on fiction, Jessie now spends her time between children’s literature and women’s fiction.

Jessie makes her home in the great state of New Hampshire where she lives with her husband and a very opinionated Basset Hound.

FacebookTwitter Pinterest