April 30, 2012

Linda Howard Love Letter (SPOILERS)

Dear Linda,

I love you. I want to be you when I grow up, even though I don't write romantic suspense. I just read your book Cry No More and it was a masterpiece of "rule" breaking. I found it so interesting that you chose not to show the so richly deserved comeuppance of the villains. I kind of missed it, but I understood that it was Milla's story and she was done with them. She had no reason to participate in or witness their demise.

I also thought it was highly unusual to have such a long denouement, but I loved it because it was what Milla needed.

Lastly, I loved your anti-hero hero, Diaz. He went against so much of what's expected in a romance hero. He didn't apologize for the violence he committed. The only apology he made was important and necessary and when I heard his explanation for betraying her, I understood completely. He was so not a romance hero that I really worried that he and Milla might not end up together.

As I said before, the book stands head and shoulders above most of the books I've read in my life, which number in the thousands. Thank you for a memorable story and an example of genre fiction that I hope to emulate one day.

Sincerely,
Kate Willoughby

April 24, 2012

EC for Men

I'm excited to announce that I've finished a manuscript. In record time! I was taken with the idea of writing something for Ellora's Cave new line, aimed at male readers. A couple of weeks later, I had a finished story!

It was so much fun, I'm writing a second, related story, and once that one is done--hopefully as quickly--I'll submit both to my new editor, April, and play the waiting game.

The first story contains a contest, chocolate cake, and a glass elevator.

As for the second story, I'm still makin' it up. LOL

April 13, 2012

Friday Fill-In #2


I found this meme and thought it would be fun to do every Friday. Feel free to fill in the blanks in the comment section. 

1. When I am __ I always ___

2. ___ is my __ of ___

3. The  ______ the ____

4. If only I _______ then ______ and everyone would be _______.

My answers:
1. When I am at Disneyland, I always feel like a kid.
2. Morning is my favorite time of day.
3. The parent of the toddler who was misbehaving in the Starbucks where I work is in for a tough 16 years.
4. If only I had won the Mega Millions. Then I would be super rich and everyone would be wanting me to pay off their mortgage.

April 9, 2012

I'm A Fantasy Geek

I adore George RR Martin's A Song of Ice and Fire series. I love the HBO series based on it, Game of Thrones. Last time, I read the book (LOVED IT) and watched the first season of the series after I read a chapter or two. It was helpful because there were so many characters and story lines going on, watching it play out on the TV clarified things in my head.

This season I'm going to watch the episodes first and then read the part in the book. I'm interested to see how my enjoyment differs.

April 6, 2012

Friday Fill-In #1


I found this meme and thought it would be fun to do every Friday. Feel free to fill in the blanks in the comment section. 
This week's blanks:
1.       I never wear ___ and I don’t know why
2.       In the winter I always___
3.       When I ___, I miss ___
4.       I love the way ___ feels.
My answers:
1.       I never wear sunglasses and I don’t know why.
2.       In the winter I always make soup. (Here's a picture of miso soup which I love, especially with tofu and those french fried onions in it!)
3.       When I travel, I miss my dog.
4.       I love the way gratitude feels.

April 4, 2012

Withholding Bad Reviews

I'm a tough critic when it comes to books. I have no problem posting a less than glowing review for a best-selling author. They usually have so many great reviews and such a huge following that my piddly opinion won't affect their career too much and it's also likely that they've developed a tough enough skin to withstand whatever problems I had with their stories.

However, when it comes to authors who haven't reached that level of success yet, I hesitate because I know how much reviews can affect sales. I just read a paranormal, erotic romance that was pretty disappointing. I read half of it before giving up. Because I feel this inexplicable need to express what I didn't like about it, I'm going to do it here without naming the book.

It started out strong. I liked the hero--he was sexy, smart, focused on his goal, mysterious. The heroine had pluck, she was strong-willed, talented. But somewhere along the way I became annoyed with the lack of info about the paranormal aspect. Conveniently, the paranormal creatures (all men) didn't want to the heroine to know what they were, how they worked, what their mission was. (One of their kind had strayed from the path and was keeping humans in thrall. Why? I have no idea. Didn't get to that part if it was ever explained.) But the author kept the reader in the dark, too, even though we were in male POVs quite a bit.

From what I gathered, the hero was of a race that I think lives forever. (That's a good thing, I suppose, since I neither heard of nor saw any females of that race.) The males could have meaningless sex with human females or relationships doomed to die because of the male life expectancy. That was the conflict. It's a good conflict, but again, I never cared that much about the characters. The paranormal guys' dialogue sounded stiff without the use of contractions, and slightly patronizing. I got the "We are superior beings and you wouldn't understand" vibe from them.

The hero was less so, but still for some reason, I didn't quite buy the relationship between the him and heroine being anything more than sexual. I've tried to figure out why, but can't put my finger on it. The author certainly showed them both displaying admirable qualities. The hero saves the heroine's sister from a fate worse than death. But for some reason, when they are forced to part ways about one third of the way in, I didn't much care.

Now, that fate worse than death... Sis was held captive and in thrall for several days by the villain. I never found out what happened to her. Maybe it was explained later. But Sis didn't want to talk about it and/or couldn't remember what happened. I'm a little fuzzy on which. It didn't help that Sis was pretty one-dimensional. She was a weak Miss Perfect Sunshine woman who probably never farted.

So, upon reflection, I suppose that the biggest reason I gave up on the book was the lack of information about what was going on and what had happened but wasn't explained. It's good to have the reader asking questions. They read to get those questions answered. But when you hold out on the answers too long, the reader may get tired of or frustrated with waiting. And when you add a romance relationship that has no chemistry beyond the sexual and a hero you're not in love with yourself, you get a DNF book.